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Kot Kotov2020-05-03 19:36:14
linux
Kot Kotov, 2020-05-03 19:36:14

How to get rid of the freezing of resource-intensive programs?

There is linux mint and unity 2019. On Windows, it responds just flawlessly. I recently switched to linux because of the speed, however, there are programs that slow down (take a long time out of minimized mode, begin to split into parts). In general, according to my observations, this happens with resource-consuming programs, although everything seemed to work flawlessly on Windows. I also understand subloading during object imports, but this happens way too often. I would be grateful for help.

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2 answer(s)
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Vladimir Korotenko, 2020-05-03
@kot123123

Who told you that Linux is faster?
Windows has a lot of graphics sitting in the kernel, so it will slow down. Plus, many A-class programs are written in Java, which is not the fastest environment. Well, frankly slaughtering vendors for software for Linux.
In general, give a list, perhaps something will be advised.

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mayton2019, 2020-05-04
@mayton2019

There is no answer to the author's question. At least the way he described it. It is necessary to look at specific graphical applications and a bug tracker for them. In Windows - a single graphics API - Win32GDI, and under it they write everything windowed. Direct* - for game graphics. This simplifies support. And in Linux there is a whole zoo of graphical environments (Gnome, Kde, XFCE) and these graphical environments also carry their own bug tracker and they should also be considered as a source of a possible problem. +The state of NVidia drivers leaves much to be desired under Linux. They are not always relevant.

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