sark02 wrote:
This link: https://pavelfatin.com/typing-with-pleasure/ (linked from the subject webpage) illustrates how editor latency is a function of the editor application more than any intrinsic system problem. Editors that do on-the-fly spell-checking, autocompletion, or code suggestion are, necessarily, burdening every keypress with algorithms, pattern-matching, database lookups, etc. It's no wonder that they can feel sluggish, or behind the curve. But in the end it's an application complaint, not a platform constraint.
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As soon as a keyboard matrix is removed from the memory bus and put on the end of a serial link (be it PS/2 or USB 3.0), the absolute keyboard to photon latency is increased, but from a human interface perspective that increase is not significant.
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I think it's absurd to make any real claim that modern computers are slower or higher-latency than 70s and 80s examples.
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I mean: you can if it makes you feel happy, but I don't think it's useful.
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Just because you were young and vital in the 70s doesn't make computers of the 70s better in any practical and useful measure than those of today.