I didn't measure it precisely, just clicked around a few things and noticed they mostly happened at that barely preservable amount of time, which I estimated to be around 0.25.
'Animate controls and elements inside windows' affects the operation progress animations (e.g., when writing metadata to items) in Windows Vista; for example, this animation does not appear if that option is disabled:
Yeah, thats a fair way to look at it especially on less powerful systems, maybe it can a make a difference. On my rig, I dont really notice anything, but if you measured it precisely, I'd have to give you that one
Yeah, I administrated a virtual desktop pool years ago during the Windows 7 days. There were a number of animations and effects that really killed performance. I setup a number of group policies to turn off all the things that make the desktop feel unresponsive.
I didn't just blindly turn everything off, I turned things off that created a lot of motion, because that is where VDI struggles, but things that made the UI look pretty, but didn't use animation, I left turned on. Kind of a funny combination of settings to see Aero Glass and drop shadows enabled, but show window contents while dragging turned off, but hey, it is what worked.
It isn't fully a placebo. If a UI element uses a 0.25 second animation to appear, then removing the animation saves 0.25 seconds. That saved 0.25 seconds may not make any difference in how quickly you can click on something, but it will affect how quickly you can see it. Just depends on your goals.
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Morfix_Benny
i'm breaking my head and can't find how to rotate a layer in photoshop cs2...?
any1 please.............
sitting on it more than hour!
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