Talk:Image noise: Difference between revisions

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Hardware information is not very important. It can be removed. It's just a reference. Improving FPS is always good. 30 FPS is enough to create a smooth animation. Any example running more than 30 FPS in most hardware is good, hence the optimization. --[[User:Guga360|Guga360]] 16:14, 2 October 2010 (UTC)
Hardware information is not very important. It can be removed. It's just a reference. Improving FPS is always good. 30 FPS is enough to create a smooth animation. Any example running more than 30 FPS in most hardware is good, hence the optimization. --[[User:Guga360|Guga360]] 16:14, 2 October 2010 (UTC)

: But why is that information requested anyway? Inter-language performance differences have never been the point of RC… –[[User:Dkf|Donal Fellows]] 16:19, 2 October 2010 (UTC)

Revision as of 16:19, 2 October 2010

What are we supposed to be doing here?

Are we supposed to be finding good hardware and tuning the random number generator to jack up fps? --Rdm 11:57, 2 October 2010 (UTC)

It could be hard to get a constructive use of the FPS here, even if dividing the examples in to compiled/interpreted, Intel/AMD/etc., GPU X/Y/Z… Still the focus would be more on performance/hardware than the languages. I would like to suggest that the examples better fix the FPS a low value (1 FPS?) which should be of for most – no matter hardware. And then also, if possible, includes this 1-sec synchronization. --<Jofur> 12:51, 2 October 2010 (UTC)
I get better than 1 fps with (by modern standards) modest hardware running Tcl. I'm not putting in my figures though; they're highly hardware-dependent. –Donal Fellows 16:04, 2 October 2010 (UTC)

Hardware information is not very important. It can be removed. It's just a reference. Improving FPS is always good. 30 FPS is enough to create a smooth animation. Any example running more than 30 FPS in most hardware is good, hence the optimization. --Guga360 16:14, 2 October 2010 (UTC)

But why is that information requested anyway? Inter-language performance differences have never been the point of RC… –Donal Fellows 16:19, 2 October 2010 (UTC)