Some have said
that moving the drawing of windows off the the GFX card
would help the load on the CPU and thus keep xruns to a minimum.
I'm sceptical about that, because drawing windows shouldn't be causing
xruns if the system is set up properly. I believe JACK Meterbridge uses
libsdl for drawing the meter needles efficiently, but I believe most
free software audio apps don't do much in the way of graphics
acceleration (yet).
I think that is beside the point. AFAIK you still need to shuffle memory
around when moving widgets on the screen no matter what they are. Offloading
this to the GPU is a clear winner. That being said, there are still parts of
Compiz that rely upon the CPU (e.g. wobbly windows calculations).
I can think of a number of drawbacks to using Compiz on audio machines
though:
1. Reliance on proprietary drivers for systems that otherwise don't
require them. OpenGL is unusable if you don't have hardware
acceleration, and not everyone has a Matrox card.
The most dominant gpu on the desktop at the moment is Intel integrated video
card and that one runs Compiz arguably better than any other board.
2. Requirement for energy-hungry 3D cards (some of these cards need more
electricity than CPUs which are perfectly usable for audio work). Apart
from any environmental or cost considerations, more energy = more waste
heat = more cooling noise. Which is bad in the studio, of course.
At DISIS we have built near silent machines from scratch with the following
specs:
C2D 2.67GHz
2 GB RAM
Nvidia 7600GT (or 8600GT)
2 x 250GB HD (RAID 1)
Etc.
Video cards are not only fanless but are also lead-free. The entire rig is
cooled by a single <1200RPM fan including the PSU. Suffice to say that the
loudest part in the machine are HDs spinning idly. BTW, the case we use is
not one of those radiator aluminum rigs...
We use Compiz with all the bells and whistles in conjunction with FA-101
(Freebob). At 5.33ms I have not had a single xrun yet.
3. Electrical waste mountain. There are millions of machines out there
which are perfectly (re)usable as audio workstations, but make Compiz a
*requirement* for using free software, and they'll have to go into
landfill.
I agree that compiz should not be a requirement. That being said, after
talking with Cory, my understanding is that Compiz would be used for very
basic stuff in its vanilla incarnation with most of the bells and whistles
disabled which should introduce performance advantages.
Y'know, both OS X and Vista have gone down the power-hungry,
new-hardware-or-forget-it route, and I'm not sure we need to follow them
there.
Again, I agree to an extent. I am at a point where I want to have a pleasing
desktop experience. I am glad to say my ratpoison days are now over...
Best wishes,
Ico