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Originally Posted by Skyld
Dynamic recompilation - the very fact you are trying to run a PowerPC program on an Intel processor, so Rosetta is having to take every PowerPC CPU instruction and then translate it and correct endianness for the program to work at all. You might like to think that Rosetta is running the program at native speed, but in reality, it rarely is.
The client on average is only taking a quarter to a third of my CPU for me on PowerPC 1.4GHz.
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Actually, that's on my 1.4ghz Power Mac G4, running Leopard. I think it takes more work than UT2004 does. It's not as hard on the gfx card, but I think it's harder on the cpu. The hard drive heats up a bit more with graal than UT2004. The cpu was using maybe 2/3. Other things run fine, and I can still open a lot of applications and windows, but it goes between 1/3 and 2/3 cpu usage. It's not a big deal, ad it's not like I can't do 100 other things on the computer while it's running graal, I was just wondering why it seems to run using a lot of the cpu.
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Also why is your GraalOnline icon in your task manager the same as Vendetta Online's application icon?
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No idea, it's always been like that. I think my java applications also took on the graal icon. It's just the icon in iStat that's messed up, so I don't mind. I think I mentioned that here before.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Stefan
Right now only a PowerPC version is available, that's why it's taking quite a lot of CPU time on Intel computers because it runs in emulation. The next Graal version should run better. The next version is planned to be released in a few weeks.
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No offense, but I'll believe it when I see it.
I'm really looking forward to it though (for the past 2 years).