On Thu, 2006-06-08 at 18:12 +0100, Keith G. Robertson-Turner wrote: > > Now the gnome clock is back, and just for fun I compared the cost of > > the clocks. If I'm reading this ps output correctly, the gnome > > clock-applet uses almost 1% of 1gig system memory and it uses 9x as > > much as the wmCalClock or wmclock. Am I reading this right? > > Well you've answered your own query. > > The reason the gnome-clock-applet is so bloated, is because it hooks > into evolution-data-server libecal. > > Frankly, if it wasn't for Beagle and the clock, I wouldn't have anything > to do with Evolution on this system - I'd much prefer it that way. And I thought that was the best thing about FC5... My company has conference calls all the time to coordinate work across several offices and the scheduling changes all the time with meeting requests managed on an exchange server. I'd never remember them without a popup at the right time and before this update (which I haven't done yet...) Evolution was doing those popups at least as well as Outlook. > I don't use Evolution - I don't want Evolution - but I have to install > it for it's dependants. Do you have any scheduled events/reminders? > Both Evolution and Beagle come from Novell, so I can understand why the > two are linked, but it's about time that we found some way of replacing > some of the bloated dependencies for a lot of Fedora components (extras > or otherwise), either by isolating and modularising those components > (i.e. libecal) or replacing them with alternatives. A dummy hook would make sense for people who can keep track of everything themselves, but I'd like mine to work - and playing a sound specific to this event would be nice too. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list