Please feel free to disregard!
As processors (even the small ones) get faster and each and every device gets more RAM, is there consequences as code is doing more?
Error handling is said to be 90% of good code, maybe a separate error handling daemon that could be chosen as per the device?
You guys deliver so much changes (which is good) but I try to consider the consequences, as in for-profit-companies-find-it-cheeper-to-give-the-developers-better-computers-than-a-rise which usually equates to bloatware that needs and uses so much more resources than the actual task requires...
On Tue, Nov 04, 2014 at 04:57:52PM +0100, Christian Huldt wrote:
Error handling is said to be 90% of good code, maybe a separate error handling daemon that could be chosen as per the device?
Not sure you're asking on the right mailing list for that. batman-adv is a kernel module. In networking. With the informel policy of being transparent, staying out of a users sight as much as possible, with an assessable amount of configuration options. So I believe batman-adv is one of the worst pieces of software pieces you could have chosen for such an argument ;).
You guys deliver so much changes (which is good) but I try to consider the consequences, as in for-profit-companies-find-it-cheeper-to-give-the-developers-better-computers-than-a-rise which usually equates to bloatware that needs and uses so much more resources than the actual task requires...
Ehm. batman-adv is written in C, capable of handling Gigabit links on tiny embedded devices... not Java or such.
b.a.t.m.a.n@lists.open-mesh.org