Tom's Hardware Reviews ATI and Nvidia on Linux
Beuno writes "I stumbled upon a GeForce vs Radeon review on Tom's Hardware, which seems normal enough. The big surprise is that it was actually a comparison of those two video cards on Linux (Fedora Core 5).
The review isn't as thorough as I would like, but it does review all aspects ranging from tools available, complexity of getting them to work and benchmarks on performance.
To me, this is a clear signs of Linux finally making a long expected breakthrough into common desktops."
Maybe this trend will have all game manufacturers making their games Linux compatible too? (As opposed to having to run them through emulators like Wine and Cedega)...
I know I'd move properly from XP if this were the case, and I suspect a lot of gamers feel the same way - there are a large portion that only use XP because getting the games to run under Linux is such a hassle.
We can but hope...
No thanks... I'll wait for the 300 page Toms Hardware revi-oh. I see.
Global symbol "$deity" requires explicit package name at line 2. - If only $scripture started "use strict;"
This is all very well but Linux's big breakthrough on the desktop won't come until we can play Duke Nukem Forever on Linux.
To me, this is a clear signs of Linux finally making a long expected breakthrough into common desktops.
Yes, how can anyone doubt that 2007 will be the year of linux on the desktop?
Generally performance running games on Linux has been a mixed bag (on the same hardware).
NWN, WoW and UT have all been slightly faster than the Windows version, and crashes have been less of a problem (ctrl-alt-f1, kill task, no need to reboot - which _is_ required for some reason under Windows as games seem to offer best performance off a fresh reboot... resource recovery problems in the DirectX subsystem maybe?)
On the other hand EVE runs slower, with more graphical artifacts. Yes I'm aware that this is because it doesn't play that nicely with WINE and the fact that it runs in a playable fashion is a small miracle. It is still the case that if you want the best performance then you have to play it on Windows, for now.
Think of the Children; Sleep with your Sister
...on their face. Most laptops with ATI Mobility Express chipsets can't use the onboard video memory. ATI broke this a year ago and has not fixed it.
So don't trust ATI for Linux capabilities on notebooks.
Maybe Toms Hardware can do a notebook comparison since they've already done the desktop. I'm pretty sure that would expose this failure to far more than the few who already are aware of this. And just maybe, it'll get ATI to fix this.
LoB
"Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
You can play Quake 3 using only free software and a 9600XT, you can't with a 7800GT.
They even mentioned DRI.
Yup, I agree. No comparison yet. I advise all my clients not to buy ATI. They will not respond to requests for support, and refuse to acknowlege any bugs. They disgust me.
The print version and because that didn't work for me, the same via coral cache
I've always used nVidia cards, which have always worked well for me under Linux. I've never tried getting an ATI card to work because I've never heard anything other than it was sheer agony to use an ATI card under Linux.
In general, this is fine. If a hardware vendor doesn't support my OS, then I will buy from a vendor who does. In this case, nVidia hovers between "almost as good as" and "slightly better than" ATI, depending on who has most recently released a new video card, so it's not a big compromise.
I do find ATIs lack of Linux support to be disappointing now however, because those of us interested on running Linux on an intel mac are stuck with a choice between ATI and an embedded crappy video card.
Incidentally, has anyone had any luck getting Linux to dual boot with OS X on one of the newer iMacs? I'm interested in getting one, but until Autodesk offers an Intel Mac version of Maya I'm stuck on Linux (and actually, even if there were an Intel Mac version, I'm not sure I want to pay the fee to transfer my license from Linux to Mac) so I can't justify getting a new machine unless it can run Linux well with good 3D support.
Famous Last Words: "hmm...wikipedia says it's edible"
Because hundreds of Desktop apps require 3D accelerated drivers.
... err ... erm ... you know.
Like erm
Oh, 3D rendering. I mean, everyone in my office spends all day doing 3D rendering.
Clue : if the speed at which windows are blitted to the screen is the rate determining step in you workflow, you're probably not getting paid enough.
Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
That's as may be, but your formatting is worse.
http://xkcd.com/313/
From TFA: "Acquiring Nvidia drivers seldom entails more than consulting a package repository for your Linux distribution of choice, and instructing local package management facilities to fetch, build, and install all required files and dependencies."
i on_notes.html#nVidia... just wanted to get the message out there to protect the penguins
Well, support for Nvidia isn't supported on FC5 because it is non-free, so you won't find it in the standard repositories using yum... if you add livna you can do "yum install kmod-nvidia -y" which will handle it all... but it is important not to use the Nvidia ones because they overwrite sections of your X and can cause problems, especially if you change you card later. More info can be found here; http://stanton-finley.net/fedora_core_5_installat
*''I can't believe it's not a hyperlink.''
Excellent troll my friend. Explain http://www.desktoplinux.com/index.html
Out of the 4 Desktops and 1 laptop in my home, 2 dual-boot, 3 are full time Linux.(All Debian) All of them gamers.
With an NVidia Graphics card Linux is a viable desktop. For work, web and Leisure.
Free Software is not a hobby, it is a way of life.
I look forward to the money I will save and you will spend on Vista. I look forward to the knowledge I will gain and you will be ignorant of. I look forward to modifying my system and my code to my liking, while you look forward to being locked out, broken apps and slashed features, and unsolvable crashes. (lest I forget the required reboots and reinstalls)
To each his own.
OSGGFG - Open Source Gamers Guide to Free Games
Sorry , I cut and pasted from the e-mail, but the formating didn't go through. I guess I sould have pressed the "preview" button before. I must have assumed that nowdays everything "just works" in linux (swiftfox on kubuntu dapper). Slashdot doesn't permitt the same post twice either. Better luck next time.
You can always get good info on hardware under linux on Phoronix. They've got lots of experience with linux builds and games and wine to give good information.
Where's your line breaks?
Bad Slashdotter. No cookie.
Regarding your problems, I'm not surprised. The last time I had an ATI card, I had to manually hack the Linux drivers, as they were autodetecting my system as using AGP 2.0, when it was AGP 3.0 (AGP 8x). Now, I have two PCI Express systems, so that wouldn't be a problem, except that experience was enough to put me off of ATI on Linux, and I haven't bought an ATI card since, except the one in this Powerbook.
Once I got it working (by commenting out autodetection and hardcoding AGP 3.0), I still had similar problems to yours -- I never really tried TV out, but I never, ever had the ability to play video properly while using the proprietary ATI drivers. The open source DRI drivers worked fine, of course, but they didn't have any 3D acceleration at all, much less the extensions required by UT2003. So I had to choose, on boot, whether I wanted to be able to watch video or play games.
Basically, even the parts of the driver that were open source (the AGP acceleration) sucked. The closed parts sucked even more, especially because I could actually fix the open parts, but not the closed ones.
My next video card was nVidia, and I've never looked back. Almost completely proprietary, but they keep it up to date with every new kernel and kernel feature I try. I have a fairly custom kernel -- 64-bit, patched for Reiser4 and recent open source drivers straight from my gigabit card manufacturer, lots of custom hacks here and there -- but all I ever have to do is "emerge nvidia-kernel" whenever I get a new kernel. And everything works as well or better than any open source drivers I've had -- I can do XvMC (hardware-accelerated mpeg decoding), or just xv (X Video extension) which almost always looks good, fullscreen, antialiased by mplayer, at 1600x1200, no matter what the video is. Any game that I can get to work on Linux, period, never has any problems from the video drivers -- stuff just works.
My only ATI card left is something I had to get for my server, which I built as a second desktop machine, with the same motherboard as my desktop -- which was built for PCI Express, which does not boot unless it has a PCI Express card in there, even though the BIOS would seem to suggest that I could use a standard, $5 bargain-bin PCI video card. Problem was, although the PCI video card works fine, it won't boot at all unless there's a PCI Express card in there. So I got a $50 ATI card, which has the added advantage that, for another $10 or so, I got a tuner card to go with it. If I ever get around to it, I can set up MythTV on that box.
Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
This seems like a good on-topic thread in which to mention the freedesktop.org (X.org folks) effort to write a 100% open source 3D driver for the NVidia cards -- nouveau
http://nouveau.freedesktop.org/wiki/
If you're an owner of an nVidia card, please do all you can to help contribute! They appear to be suprisingly far along.
--
Slashcode bug # 497457 - unfixed since December 2001 - Go look it up!
o/~ Join us now and share the software
Does this mean that xgl will work properly on the latest ATI drivers? The last time I tried it was pretty much a no go unless you had an nvidia card....
XGL accelerates standard desktop windows.
The question still remains: does anyone actually find that unaccelerated desktop windows are slowing them down? I don't know about you, but I think faster than I type, and my editor displays the characters I type faster than either.
Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
I got a Nvidia card with passive cooling for my Linux desktop instead on the onboard graphics. All the desktop computers I have had at work, have always been slow compared to Windows with any Linux distribution when it comes to graphics speed. It does not make it better that you need to run a higher resolution to get the same screen "real estate". (of course, tuning font sizes help a bit).
Anyway I installed the 50$ Nvidia card which solved that problem. And with SUSE 10, I hope I don't have to worry about compiling the drivers every time there's a kernel update since the Nvidia drivers can be found in YAST.
Need an AGP card for a desktop that'll be running Linux 24x7. Don't want to spend an arm and a leg, can anyone recommend a decent card for under $100?
Thanks!
It's hardly a troll. What's more important to define this is what exactly you mean by "desktop linux". If you define it as running office applications, browsing the web and keeping in touch through email, then Linux is less of a hobby and more of a reality. With distribution like Ubuntu, assuming you run all the non-written suggested hardware, you can have a fully functional and perfectly sane Linux desktop. Although, if you define "desktop linux" as being able to play native 3D games reliably, then desktop linux is almost entirely a hobbiest system still. People that want that sort of desktop will more than likely be interested in systems like XGL and their choices of easily compatible hardware are more restricted, add on top of that all kinds of potential conflicts with software, etc. The simple fact remains that other than installing a linux machine, not much more has become easier. The desktop environments are richer, and with a graphical package system installing software into is easier. But, the overall 'experience' of desktop linux still requires a higher technical skill than even many pc gamers are willing to invest enough time into learning. Maybe it's the rabid 'linux ftw' people who are instead trolls. Some people really do just like to turn on their machine and find it works. Windows offers that, and still will for some time over linux.
There are other reasons to buy nVidia. They actually support OTHER open source operating systems. (FreeBSD, Solaris) I can play some games under FreeBSD 6 like Enemy Territory quite nicely using the nvidia binary drivers. The binary drivers got me to buy my first nVidia card ever. I'm rather impressed with it considering its not even one of their more recent cards (only fx5200). xorg support sucks above 9200 chipsets as their is no 3d acceleration. I only wish nvidia made their own video cards like ati does. I've had bad luck with some oem cards. (one nvidia and several ati)
MidnightBSD: The BSD for Everyone
Try the r300 driver. See my post here: http://linux.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=191304&t hreshold=1&commentsort=0&mode=thread&pid=15724881# 15725179
If it's no on fire, it's a hardware problem.
Oh yeah - playing the awesome BSOD game! It's as much a part of the windows entertainment pack as solitare!
No, I don't trust in god. He'll have to pay up front, like everybody else.
There's a similar effort for ATI drivers. See my post here: http://linux.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=191304&t hreshold=1&commentsort=0&mode=thread&pid=15724881# 15725179
If it's no on fire, it's a hardware problem.
The question still remains: does anyone actually find that unaccelerated desktop windows are slowing them down? I don't know about you, but I think faster than I type, and my editor displays the characters I type faster than either.
Moving a window on an unaccelerated desktop uses quite a bit of cpu time, thereby reducing what is available to other programs. An accelerated desktop makes it a lot easier for your machine to actually keep burning that DVD at full speed even when you are switching between windows, rearranging them or such things.
In other words, a desktop that makes good use of hardware acceleration can not only do things in a visually nicer way, it also stays out of the way for cpu intensive operations.
I look forward to the money I will save and you will spend on Vista. I look forward to the knowledge I will gain and you will be ignorant of. I look forward to modifying my system and my code to my liking, while you look forward to being locked out, broken apps and slashed features, and unsolvable crashes. (lest I forget the required reboots and reinstalls)
Recently I switched from Mandriva 2006 to Suse 10.1. I have had nothing but trouble with getting any kind of performance (when the drivers do work) on my ATI video card. I switched to Suse because the Mandriva croud just doesn't seem to have much activity within the user and support communities. Also ATI claims support for Suse. While I like Suse much better and find the community much richer, my Linux install is still crippled.
I'm not a kernel/driver programmer. Quite frankly, while it is completely possible for me to dig in to every aspect of Linux programming, I don't have that kind of time and resource. You can call me "ignorant" all you want. While you look forward to choosing specific hardware for Linux, modifying you system code to get it working, and calling people ignorant for not knowing what you know, I look forward to not buying all new hardware (thousands of dollars and a gamble to boot) just to get a functional system.
I'll still enjoy open source when I can but I can't make fixing it "way of life." I still use OpenOffice.orgOpenOffice.org, Firefox GIMP, and a host of other software packages that don't cost me money even on Windows. Windows isn't perfect and Microsoft sucks, but I don't have to alter my way of life and become a system programmer to make it work--and I don't think that is all that ignorant.
I want this account deleted.
And I saw Linus Torvad on a potato chip.
That's nothing. I saw a burrito on RMS.
KFG
Sure. But who moves windows about very often, or for extended periods of time?
Does it really matter if your computationally intensive task takes 1200 minutes or 1200 minutes and ten seconds?
If your DVD burner is running so close to underflow that moving a big window turns your DVD into a coaster, then your major problem is not with the graphics driver.
3D acceleration has its place, but its not whats stopping Linux on the desktop, because the needs 99.99% of desktop users are perfectly well served by generic X drivers.
OK: Time to mention the elephant in the room.
When people say Desktop Linux needs better 3D performane, the vast majority of them are talking about gaming. That's fine, and a genuine concern for gamer. But lets not pretend that Linux Gaming and Desktop Linux are synonymous terms.
Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
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You don't have to do a lot of pre-formatting; just change the mode from "HTML" to "Plain Old Text", which is actually HTML except that a linebreak is inserted at the end of every line (so you could still insert HTML tags). I've set "Plain Old Text" as my default.
But, yes, I don't regard the Preview button as optional.
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404555974007725459910684486621289147856453481154 in hex is "You sank my Battleship?"
[GPG key in journal]
From the article,
"Installing Nvidia drivers is simple, straight-forward, and usually incorporated into your distribution's package repository. For example, Fedora Core 5 offers GeForce driver revisions 8756 and 8762 through select repositories, so installation involves little more than invoking Yellow Dog Updater, Modified (YUM) or YUM Extender (YUMEX). Nvidia clearly wins on this front, because ATI doesn't offer this luxury."
The last few updates of the ATI drivers I have recieved have been done so via YUM on FC5. In fact I'm due for an upgrade now,
yum check-update
...
...
kernel.i686
kmod-fglrx.i686
THE HONOUR OF THE KNIGHTS - CC Licensed Sci-Fi Novel
I'm still looking for any graphics card with amd64 Linux drivers that supports either dual-dvi with accelerated portrait mode (1200x1600 x2), or dual-link DVI (2560x1600). Matrox have some that will do it, but only with proprietary drivers and only on ia32.
Peter
So NVidia and ATi are crap at providing Linux drivers. But is there any video card which is really supported under linux (open source drivers provided by the manufacturer) that is any good and economically viable? It can even be an equivalent to a NVidia mx400. Is there anything like that in the market?
Slashdot, fix your code or at least hire someone who is competent at it to do it for you.
Ah, bitter dregs.
I've been running Xgl in Gentoo for roughly 6 months now using my X300 card in my Dell D610. Check out the http://gentoo-wiki.com/HOWTO_XGL page for details as well as Xgl threads in the Unsupported Software forums at forums.gentoo.org. The latest version (well nearly latest, I just svn'ed up and aparently a new version came out) is very stable and only a handful of apps crash it (GoogleEarth being the big one, but I imagine other OpenGL intensive apps may cause issues).
Sadly, PS/2 was yet another victim of USB, which doesn't care what you plug into it, the electrical slut.
Everybody else who says differently has used Linux for 5 minutes (like the author of that "excellent" article).
Beuno writes:
"The review isn't as thorough as I would like..."
Nine pages wasn't enough. We want ten... and a 96 oz Big Gulp, a 4 lb bag of doritos and bigger cheeseburger options.
RTFM; please, I beg you.
Ah ha now I can run Penguin Planet (formerly Tux racer) at 500 frames per second. Now never mind the refresh rate on my monitor is 70 hz, I tell ya that's living. Who needs to solve world hunger or war when you've got this?
Tired of all the isms, don't exploit people as an employer, or a government, mmmmK?
Sure. But who moves windows about very often, or for extended periods of time?
Does it really matter if your computationally intensive task takes 1200 minutes or 1200 minutes and ten seconds?
No it does not, but you are misinterpreting the issue.
Considering that part of desktop use is things like playign video and audio, doing voice over ip communications and such, having less things in the way of good realtime performance makes those things work instead of break intermittently. It makes performance more predictable and it makes it easier to guarantee responsiveness.
If your DVD burner is running so close to underflow that moving a big window turns your DVD into a coaster, then your major problem is not with the graphics driver.
While that is true, it in no way counters the argument that removing a component that can get in the way makes for a better situation.
3D acceleration has its place, but its not whats stopping Linux on the desktop
Not on its own, no. It is one of the factors.
, because the needs 99.99% of desktop users are perfectly well served by generic X drivers.
That in no way changes that having accelerated drivers makes for a substantially better experience, better responsiveness while generating lower overhead, and makes more things work in nice and predictable ways.
OK: Time to mention the elephant in the room.
When people say Desktop Linux needs better 3D performane, the vast majority of them are talking about gaming. That's fine, and a genuine concern for gamer. But lets not pretend that Linux Gaming and Desktop Linux are synonymous terms.
The fact that you believe (as you already stated anyway) that 3D acceleration is not highly desirable for desktop use doesn't make it so. Go read the opengraphics mailinglist if you want to get a clue about why exactly 3D acceleration is really really important for generic desktop use.
If you don't see the advantages for your own typical use, that is fine, maybe there are none in your SPECIFIC case.
Hmm, it seems that you, too, are a fine product of the US education.
a tional_Student_Assessment for example.
See http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2005/2005003.pdf or http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Programme_for_Intern
I don't know much about other country's schools, but allot of people seem to want to come here to go to University, not to mention work and live.
That's curious... I learned how to develop software and build/maintain networks (CCNP) in my US public high school. Was part of your school curriculum related to teaching you how to make broad generalized claims without backing or proof?
You mispelled that.
;)
"Fixed in CVS!!!1!eleventy"
There, fixed that for ya
Technology tips and tricks.
Are you sure that the driver is unaccelerated? I thought that the open source drivers (both ATI and nVidia) were 2D-accelerated, but lacked 3D acceleration. I haven't had slow performance on the (2D) desktop for ages.
I agree with you 100%. I would probably pay $500+ for a graphics card that would allow me to use additional features within XGL (or rather the same features, just faster). So I'm very interested in 3D acceleration, yet I haven't played a PC game since I ditched Windows 5 years ago. If I had a brand new $500 graphics card, I still wouldn't use it to play games -- I would be buying it to accelerate my desktop performance.
It's not that I need things to happen any faster in order to increase my productivity.. it's that I like smooth, high-resolution desktop graphics.
I mean a fully functional multi-purpose computing/entertainment/communication/creation device. For some people Windows XP fits this definition with the addition of a few software titles. For me and mine Linux fits this definition and fits it better and cheaper.
if you define "desktop linux" as being able to play native 3D games reliably, then desktop linux is almost entirely a hobbiest system still
I said fully right. What I don't expect is it to play every Windows DirectX10 game the day it comes out. Eventually, odds are good, unless it is a MS title, we'll get it running. Better still we convince the publishers that we BUY Linux Binaries, I bought UT2004 and Quake4 and Doom3. I'd buy more. Wine takes care of the rest.
The simple fact remains that other than installing a linux machine, not much more has become easier.
Spoken like someone who doesn't recall how truly difficult everything was not so long ago in linux. We've come a long way, really really fast. I find it better. It may not be perfect but niether are the alternatives, I trust the forward momentum in this lane. Not only that I get to help if I want.
Some people really do just like to turn on their machine and find it works. Windows offers that, and still will for some time over linux.
http://kanotix.com/ Just works, off the CD, I wonder if the Vista DVD will be like that. The laptop I refer to in the parent post runs it 24/7.
So to sum it up, Nvidia makes a Linux Desktop, ATi breaks it.
OSGGFG - Open Source Gamers Guide to Free Games
Even though I'm not the GP, I'll reply. I did not buy any special Linux-compatible hardware, and I did not have to modify any system code to get my systems working, including graphics drivers. I use Fedora Core 5 for my desktop system and Fedora Core 4 for my work laptop. My desktop has a recent nVidia card and my laptop has an ATI Radeon card, and both are using the proprietary drivers from their respective vendors. The only thing I had to do after system installation was to add the third-party RPM repository Livna, which provides packages that don't conform to the Fedora Core package inclusion rules (such as proprietary software or packages that are potentially patent-infringing in the US). After adding the Livna repository, I could install the nVidia and ATI drivers, NTFS driver, multimedia software and codecs, etc, directly from the package manager. And there wasn't any code modification involved. And it all works just fine.
Students have to pushed in order actually do anything. When I was taught to swim, they threw me in the water and let me flail around until I could swim. Now they hand you a book on swimming and call it equivalent.
I have nothing to say.
We need Open Source drivers! I don't mind closed proprietary stuff at the application level, but I demand at it in the infrastructure. When I buy a piece of hardware with my hard earned money, even a video card, I expect to be the full owner of that hardware. I don't want it beholden to NVidia or ATI. If they want to tell me what software I can run on my hardware, then can damned well fork over part of the purchase price for it!
I've had a new laptop for four weeks now. I put on Kubuntu because ATI "supports" the video (X1400) with a native Linux driver. Today I gave up and installed FreeBSD. I've spent four weekends too many trying to get it to work. For a TFT display, the vesa driver is more than acceptable, and I might as well be using it on an OS I'm familiar with, instead of figuring out a new one. I don't get to play fancy 3D games, but who the fsck cares? This is a work machine! (On the upside, FreeBSD supports the wifi card in the laptop while Linux doesn't).
Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
I mean a fully functional multi-purpose computing/entertainment/communication/creation device. For some people Windows XP fits this definition with the addition of a few software titles. For me and mine Linux fits this definition and fits it better and cheaper.
And you're entitled to believe that, but someone elses belief doesn't make them a troll.
I said fully right. What I don't expect is it to play every Windows DirectX10 game the day it comes out. Eventually, odds are good, unless it is a MS title, we'll get it running. Better still we convince the publishers that we BUY Linux Binaries, I bought UT2004 and Quake4 and Doom3. I'd buy more. Wine takes care of the rest.
And I said 'native', Wine doesn't count as a native application. Developers are entitled to be rewarded for the work they put into developing games by their users paying for them. Just because there's a review on Tom's doesn't mean though that Linux will be coming out of the closet anytime soon. The Macintosh is infinitely more capable of providing those sorts of services (with a larger userbase) and there still is not any sort of critical mass there.
Spoken like someone who doesn't recall how truly difficult everything was not so long ago in linux. We've come a long way, really really fast. I find it better. It may not be perfect but niether are the alternatives, I trust the forward momentum in this lane. Not only that I get to help if I want.
I never said linux hasn't come far, but let's face it it's still playing catchup to everything else out there. There's some nifty things available on a linux desktop, but none of it comes easily or even intuitively most of the time(being intuitive is more important than easy imo).
http://kanotix.com/ Just works, off the CD, I wonder if the Vista DVD will be like that. The laptop I refer to in the parent post runs it 24/7.
I suppose if you view linux as a beta operating system you can legitimately compare it to Vista. And, yes, Linux is extremely versatile, allowing things like DVD booting, but that sort of functionality hardly defines an operating system. Although, you can do a CD boot in XP.
My whole point was that as a whole package linux still isn't even ready for primetime in the respects of the original post, and probably never will. While it is a reliable day-to-day desktop for average tasks, it is not a solution for the average day-to-day advanced user. The simple fact that game card developers don't actively support their cards under the platform, or that game developers don't release games to the platform even simultaneously says alot. Both of these types of developers apparently don't view the platform as either mature enough, or available in enough mass to make their products worthy of top-notch support.
*shrug* all of this is opinion derived from observation. And, of course, opinions are like a backside -- everyone has one, and they usually stink.
Nathan
http://userstyles.org/style/show/490 in combination with https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/2108/
Can be usefull for other sites as well that you read often.
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
did ati fix em? There where a bunch last I tried to really use the drive, but that was over a year ago. How about install? Last time I used ATI's driver on a non-stock kernel, it was a bitch to get working. I've got a Radeon 9200 right now (much as I love nvidia software, their tv out kinda sucks), and I've been stuck in WinXP.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
Q.E.D.
Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
ATI's track record of Linux support is appauling, the most recent example being their pulling support for all pre-R300 cards. They also flatly refuse to assist DRI developers working on the R300, claiming that their own driver 'supports' the R300 and above line. But in all honesty, that 'support' is patchy at best, and the writing is on the wall for R300 support as well - pretty soon only the new X1xx cards will be supported.
...
Locking when switching between X and a console are NOT FIXED despite what the article says - ATI simply marked the bug page in bugzilla as 'fixed'. There are lockups with XGL. The XPRESS chipset is very badly supported and very slow - my friend's Turion-based laptop with an XPRESS chipset plays UT2004 slower than my Athlon XP 1600 with an original Radeon 7200 with DRI drivers! 2D performance is pathetic. There is no XRENDER acceleration. Suspending / hibernating doesn't work. XCOMPOSITE support is non-existant. The list goes on and on.
If people want a gaming card, buy an nVidia, or you will be sorry. If gaming isn't so important, buy a something with an Intel chipset - they have excellent open-source drivers, and are only getting better. I installed XGL on a laptop with an Intel i945G card last weekend, and I was shocked by it's impressive performance - XGL in particular was as smooth as I've ever seen it
truth about the card quality :(
i've never actually had a card _not work_, but i've had some small problem with every nvidia card i've had. the fan failed awfully fast on my 6600gt, and the ti4200(i think?) that i had before this had ram issues. i also had a geforce2 or something before that which had some small issue.
i've never had a problem with an ati card, but i've only owned 2(rage pro pci and a rage mobility) and heard so much bad news about even trying them on linux that one of those machines just got sold, and the other one is running win2k as a backup machine of sorts.
To me, this is a clear signs of Linux finally making a long expected breakthrough into common desktops.
To me, this is a clear sign that those two hardware sites just happened to think that reviewing them under Linux was cool.
The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
This isn't something I wanted to see.
The hazards of clicking on links, I guess.
"Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master."
Well this is not exactly true actually. in fact if you follow that link you will go to the standard site (/index.html). But when you are there, replace the /index.html by /print.html and voilà, you are done. Thanks :)
Bullshit. XGL works great on my Macbook with Intel graphics using open drivers.
Open Source Sushi
Its not just about moving windows- its about being able to easily manipulate them. My desktop is a lot nicer now that Linux has a decent Expose ccopy with XGL and Compiz. Before XGL, the software that tried to do that without the GPU sucked (look up skippy).
Open Source Sushi
I look forward to saving 10 to 20 hours setting up my OS. I look forward to my applications and drivers working properly out of the box. I look forward to getting professional support and service instead of posting online in a Linux forum to ask for help from condescending 16-year-olds with all the answers who tell the neophytes to STFU and RTFM.
Have you tried setting up Ubuntu lately? The concept of using a liveCD to install is brilliant. Setting up a functioning Linux computer including office, internet tools and many other things is much less work than setting up Windows. No driver-hunting (you say out of the box, but which box?), no third-party websites, no endless reboots when fully updating. It's really only 30 minutes for a fully functional, fully updated computer. In all fairness, I run Gentoo (to appeal to women, mostly), which has all the problems you mention. But that's exactly the point: there's choice.
When the policeman of the tie, rule you violate, hello punishment of the kitty?
In my case this was likely because the windows graphics drivers are integrated with the power-saving, buttons, etc. You can't use the updated ones from the graphics-card manufacturer, and the laptop manufacturer stopped updating the specific ones for that laptop (and latter models went with ATI instead of NVidia).
So in the end, I had windows with less up-to-date graphics drivers, and crappy gameplay in BattleField 2. On the other hand, Linux+NVidia Driver+Cedega game better gameplay for many of the games requiring a newer graphics driver.
On other systems, I've found that sometimes there's a graphics/FPS penalty for running Cedega (depending on the game), but loadtimes from the disk tended to be a bit faster on the ReiserFS filesystem etc etc.