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nForce2 GART Driver Finally Released For Linux

Rejoice, Radeon owners! For those of you who bought an nForce2 motherboard with the hopes of doing a bit of linux gaming on it, I'm sure it was a pretty hard let down to find out there was no AGPGART driver for the nForce2 -- until now. nVidia has finally released a kernel patch for the 2.4.20 release that is now providing GART support. Perhaps this means that nVidia is re-thinking their closed source-isms in favor of a more open policy in the future. A note on AGP 3.0: Note that AGP 8x mode is not available in 2.4.xx series kernels. If you find that X will not start, try disabling 8X mode in your BIOS. AGP3.0 has been implemented in the 2.5 series.

5 of 238 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Radeon owners? by cheshiremackat · · Score: 5, Informative

    Because, before this patch, under linux you could only run an Nvidia based AGP card... Nvidia (used to) only supply an NVAGP module that would not work with ATI products...

    Essentially this meant that if you ran linux under nforce you were stuck to an all Nvidia lineup...

    The only hiccup is that IMHO Nvidia has better drivers under Linux than ATI... true, Nvidia's are closed source ( a /. no-no) but they are better performance-wise than the open-source ATI DRI drivers...

    _CMK

    --
    Bad spellers of the world untie!
  2. Re:The GPL: Intellectual Theft by bajo77 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Linux's lack of Token Ring support and the fact that we were unable to defrag its ext2 file system

    Information on token ring support for linux is available at www.linuxtr.net

    As far as I know ext2 does not really need to be defragmented as performance is not affected as much as it is on fat*/ntfs. Also there are ways to defrag it.

    So you can imagine our suprise when we were informed by a lawyer that we would be required to publish our source code for others to use.

    You switched to Linux without reading the copyright? Not to mention that you only need to release the source code if you modify existing gpl'ed projects.

    I think the biggest thing keeping Linux from being truly competitive with Microsoft is this GPL...

    Now you're just trolling, this is offtopic anyway. The only reason Linux has become successful is because many people add to it...

  3. Re:The GPL: Intellectual Theft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    You either have no knowledge on Free Software licenses, hire incompetent lawyers, or are deliberately trying to spread FUD (I can assure the latter will not work on /.)

    (1) The "GPL compatible licensed" terms only applies to _distributed_ work. If your organiztion really are doing internal only work, you do not have any obligations to make available your source or binaries.

    (2) Compiling code with GCC does NOT make your code automatically GPLed (how/where did you dig up lawyers like that?)

  4. Re:gaming already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Because they was no way to use the AGP port without using the binary Nvidia drivers.. which was ok if you happened to have a nvidia graphics card in your nforce motherboard, but if you were running a ATI, or matrox card you couldn't load the AGP driver :-(
    It was one of the reasons I purchased a ti4200 to drop in my nforce1(415-D - no inbuilt graphics card) (and now nforce2) motherboard.

    I assume you were using the IGP.. as this would have allowed the nvidia drivers to load.

  5. Re:The GPL: Intellectual Theft by 101percent · · Score: 5, Informative

    "Furthermore, after reviewing this GPL our lawyers advised us that any products compiled with GPL'ed tools - such as gcc - would also have to its source code released. This was simply unacceptable."

    This is simply untrue. Many non-free systems are compiled using GCC. Many propreitary systems are built using the Gnu Compiler Collection, and I have never heard of the Free Software Foundation claiming that they must release their code. I think this is either a misinterpretation by your lawyers or general just fear, uncertainty, and doubt on behalf of your company.

    "I think the biggest thing keeping Linux from being truly competitive with Microsoft is this GPL. Its draconian requirements virtually guarentee that no business will ever be able to use it."

    The GPL is hardly more draconian than the Microsoft EULA. Furthermore, the GPL is clearly not about companies. The GPL is about giving freedom to the user.

    "Everyone was very pleased with Linux, and we were considering using it for a great deal of future internal projects."

    Your comment significes the overwhelming sensibility of sharing code. All the public resources that have gone into creating the myriad of propreitary products is generallyh wasteful. Their is no point in trying to re-invent the wheel. Their is no point in not sharing generally useful technical information.

    I personally admire what your company did in contracting to modify Free software for specialized purposes. This is exactly how Free Software would benefit to our economy, especially for developers such as yourself. The only reason that things like Microsoft EULA's exist is so that someone can take away the freedom of their users and exhibit a system of power over them as people. The arguement that companies must protect their intellectual property is flawed because the money that they make generally doesn't go into paying for the costs of distrobution. It goes into things like making Bill Gates a very rich man. That's a system not at all concerned with compensating the developers, once you make an analysis and really think about it.