Henning,
> On the other hand, they really have nice computers: > > AlphaServer ES45, 4@1GHz, Tru64 > > time make -j4: > real 0m48.473s > user 0m39.115s > sys 0m31.299s > > Slightly faster than yours :-) Well, I want to have one of those :-) > Quite fast if you consiere, that it's used by quite a lot of users. I'm sure I can't beat that today (although my next PC probably will -- in a few years' time). I can't beat your 386 either, but here a pretty slow one: iPAQ H3650, also from the HP TestDrive, 195MHz StrongARM-1110, 32MB RAM. It configures like this: enabling DC210/DC240 backends disabling CANON_PP backend (failed to find required libieee1284 version) disabling HPSJ5S backend (failed to find required libieee1284 version) disabling GPHOTO2 backend (not requested, or failed to find gphoto2-config or JPEG lib) disabling PINT backend enabling QuickCam backend enabling Video4Linux backend enabling NET backend disabling SM3600 backend enabling SnapScan backend in real 3m38.541s user 0m43.970s sys 0m41.420s after which the actual build is real 42m50.703s user 32m47.140s sys 3m51.420s It seems to build without errors. Sorry I couldn't test anything on it, maybe we should ask HP to connect a USB scanner or so? I originally wanted to give you a real killer slug but gave up on it: a 40MHz SPARCstation 1+ from 1988 with 16MB RAM running diskless as a SANE server (1.0.2 at the moment). The two problems I had compiling is that current SANE doesn't like the linux 2.0.x header files still on that machine, and that 16MB isn't enough for some of the backends (and linux 2.0.x can't swap to NFS). It would have taken a really long time though. Oh, BTW, the HP iPAQ has its clock set to 1934 for some reason, sure it's way ahead of its time. Andras =========================================================================== Major Andras e-mail: and...@users.sourceforge.net www: http://andras.webhop.org/ ===========================================================================