Welcome to the Linux Foundation Forum!
Native support for ATI and nVidia, best choice today?
Comments
-
I have had the same negative experiences trying to get ATI to work with the binary drivers on Linux based systems. For that reason all of my systems either have nvidia or intel graphics. ATI has released their specs to the linux engineers and the native kernel drivers are getting better, as for nvidia they jsut started working with the kernel devs and granting information that will improve the performance. Hopefully with the potential of Steam Machines they will both take the Linux ecosystem more seriously and increase their contributions.0
-
Have to say the same. My first computer when I moved to Linux for many years ago, had ATI. It was a mess, and I changed to nVidia. After that ATI was totally out of the picture.
I never had any problems with nVidia or Intel, not much problem with Intel even when they rewrote their driver either that seemed to cause some annoyances.
However, with this last laptop, it is far from as straight forward it was/is with nVidia without Optimus.
I am not sure which way to go now, although I still holds a finger towards nVidia due to their native support compared to ATI and performance compared to Intel.
But, it seems to be a lot going on with AMD/ATI and nVidia considering Steam focusing on Linux. Also, nVidia has met a lot of critics from the community, and lost some big business agreements because of the lack of open drivers in China.
So I feel the best might be to wait, and pay attention to which of the companies would provide the best drivers, both open and closed. A lot has happened since I had problems with ATI, so they might have gotten better with 3D performance in Linux, a couple of days ago they released a bunch of 3D GPU documentation as well. And I have never had any problems with Intel, and with the Iris Pro serie, it seems that they are getting closer to some decent graphical performance.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 175 LFX Mentorship
- 175 LFX Mentorship: Linux Kernel
- 745 Linux Foundation IT Professional Programs
- 372 Cloud Engineer IT Professional Program
- 168 Advanced Cloud Engineer IT Professional Program
- 73 DevOps IT Professional Program - Discontinued
- 3 DevOps & GitOps IT Professional Program
- 98 Cloud Native Developer IT Professional Program
- 7.6K Training Courses & Learning Paths
- AI & ML Training
- Blockchain & Decentralized Identity Training
- 2 Cloud & Containers Training
- Cybersecurity Training
- DevOps & Site-Reliability Training
- Linux Kernel Development Training
- Networking Training
- Open Source Best Practice Training
- System Administration Training
- System Engineering Training
- Web & Application Development Training
- 792 Hardware
- 202 Drivers
- 68 I/O Devices
- 37 Monitors
- 95 Multimedia
- 173 Networking
- 91 Printers & Scanners
- 87 Storage
- 768 Linux Distributions
- 81 Debian
- 67 Fedora
- 22 Linux Mint
- 13 Mageia
- 24 openSUSE
- 150 Red Hat Enterprise
- 31 Slackware
- 13 SUSE Enterprise
- 356 Ubuntu
- 465 Linux System Administration
- 31 Cloud Computing
- 73 Command Line/Scripting
- Github systems admin projects
- 98 Linux Security
- 78 Network Management
- 101 System Management
- 46 Web Management
- 106 Mobile Computing
- 18 Android
- 73 Development
- 1.2K New to Linux
- 1K Getting Started with Linux
- 392 Off Topic
- 121 Introductions
- 181 Small Talk
- 29 Study Material
- 946 Programming and Development
- 310 Kernel Development
- 618 Software Development
- 981 Software
- 373 Applications
- 182 Command Line
- 5 Compiling/Installing
- 68 Games
- 317 Installation
- Archived
- 2 LFD140 Class Forum
Upcoming Training
-
August 20, 2018
Kubernetes Administration (LFS458)
-
August 20, 2018
Linux System Administration (LFS301)
-
August 27, 2018
Open Source Virtualization (LFS462)
-
August 27, 2018
Linux Kernel Debugging and Security (LFD440)