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Re: Warp4 on a 701 (was: NT on 750)



On Mon, 11 Aug 97 13:00:07, Geoff Hogan wrote:

>>If he was running Warp4 he must be accustomed to sluggishness. I
>>installed it on one of the two hard drives for my 701 (DX4/75, 24mb) and
>>find it to be very slow compared to Win95, which runs quite well on the
>
>I run Warp 4 on my desktop (P133, 40MB, 1GB) where it runs happily, but Warp
>Connect on my TP 755cx (P75, 16MB, 540MB (shared with Linux) on which it runs fine,
>though noticably slower.  And that's the way I intend to leave it - Warp 4 does seem to
>need more recources than Warp 3 (I had 16MB on my desktop before I upgraded to
>32MB and then 40MB.  The performace gain of this last step I found barely noticeable,
>I was simply using up a redundant SIMM that a colleague couldn't use, but the first
>made a huge difference!).
>
>>Though I like some things about Warp4, I'm baffled as to why there is no
>>feature for file management, like File Manager/Explorer on the Windows
>>system. This omission alone makes it almost too tedious to use. I assume
>>there are OS/2 file manager programs one can buy.
>
>Not being that familiar with Windows systems I'm not quite sure how the OS/2 Drives
>function differs from the Win95 Explorer.  You have drag and drop file moving, copying,
>deleting and creating shadows (similar to the Win95 shortcut) as well as access to
>object properties, editing text files, running programmes, etc.  Mind you, having said
>that, and having cut my teeth in the days of DOS on an XT I'm still not entirely
>comfortable with the object oriented concept and mainly use File Commander/2, a
>shareware equivalent of Norton Commander, for file handling.
>
>Geoff
>
>---------------------------------------------------------------
>Dr G P Hogan
>Laser Group,  Clarendon Lab.,	Tel:  +44 1865 272205
>Parks Road,  Oxford  OX1 3PU	Fax:  +44 1865 272400
>UK				Email: g.hogan@physics.ox.ac.uk
>---------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
I use a program called ZTreeBold, which is a clone of XTreeGold
for OS/2.  I also prefer a regular command line, as this is what I am
accustomed to and another reason that I am so comfortable with
Linux and OS/2, though a GUI is still nice for a lot of other tasks.

I think that it's also because Windows users are bigtime mouse users,
but you don't "always" need a mouse in OS/2, or especially Linux.

Just 2½ again.

Paul