NVIDIA Performance On Linux, Solaris, & Vista
AtomBOB suggests a Phoronix review comparing the performance of a Quadro graphics card on Windows Vista Ultimate, Solaris Express Developer, and Ubuntu Linux. The graphics card used was a NVIDIA Quadro FX 1700 mid-range workstation part. The cross-platform benchmark used was SPECViewPerf 9.0 from SPEC. Quoting Phoronix: "Using the Quadro FX1700 512MB and the latest display drivers, Windows Vista wasn't the decisive winner, but the loser... Ubuntu 8.04 Alpha 5 with the 169.12 driver had overall produced the fastest results within SPECViewPerf. In only three benchmarks had Solaris Express Developer 1/08 outpaced Ubuntu Linux, but with two of these tests the results were almost identical.""
I've wondered this a while. What is the difference between the gaming cards and the workstation cards from Nvidia and ATI? Do they just have better DACs? Certified driver support for business apps? Or is the GPU itself somehow?
Alex
I am surprised by this as I would have thought Nvidia would have put more effort into their Vista driver with Linux drivers being mostly on the back burner. I am assuming it is because their Linux driver is old code (which we all know contains less bugs then new code) whereas the Vista driver is written from scratch?
Either way I think this shows the awesomeness of Ubuntu and Linux. ^_^
not sure about what I'm saying but I think the workstation cards are optimized for 2d rendering and CAD stuff.
the past few drivers had been getting better and better, but this one broke about half my 3D apps.
the graphics start ok, but when i make any inputs(keyboard or mouse) what ever it is crashes.
this is on a HP Pavillion Amd turion64 running 64bit Debian at Testing
This is serious question, I heard a while back that Vista had done something to make OpenGL slower.
Could Vista's bad performance be due to its nerfing of OpenGL on Vista in order to get developers to pick DX?
Vista has a new driver architecture and it is goiing to take some time for MS to improve the graphic subsystem performance. It will also take NVidia a while to optimise their code for Vista.
Even then, the Vista architecture might just have some inherent issues that are hard to code around.
Engineering is the art of compromise.
I thought the whole deal with Vista is that it has a new driver model. Thus, its going to be some time before drivers can really be completely optimized for it.
This is my sig.
Communist linsux doesn't have any real software to take advantage of the hardware. Where are the fucking games? The only fucking games on communist linsux are lamr puzzles and a yahtzee clone thatcan't fucking randomize properly. Whie we're at it, where are the professional 3D applications? I am not talkin about the gpl3 shit backed by the communist fucktard RMS (BTW, great initals, Richard stallman=RMS Titanic), but the real professional tools. Windows sure has them, buit that is what you fucktarded shitdot sheeple get for going communist open-sores. Then you wonder why you can't get a fucking job or get fucking laid. (well that and your shrinking dicks)
That is only because it has to check the signature of each polygon to make sure that it is properly licensed to be rendered in the current user's context on the active display.
...I wonder how XP stacks up
The spec benchmark is OpenGL. Check the OpenGL/Direct3D discussuion on Wikipedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_OpenGL_and_Direct3D
This doesn't really prove very much because OpenGL isn't important on Windows and because the implementation is different platform to platform.
This is a comparison of drivers, if there were consistent performance difference between the os's, you could claim one OS is faster than the other. This isn't the case at all, the scores are all over the place. Sure, some difference is OS based, but when the results are such a small sample with not much of a clear trend, its only useful to compare which OS is better for this particular hardware / driver combo.
If you're a quattro user, your OS choice would surely be on software available for whatever particular professional application you are using the card for. As a sound designer, that would be for me, XP. I don't think many professionals are ready to jump to vista quite yet so I'm surprised that they have not included it. We are, after all, looking for stability.
I record my sleeptalking
I honestly wonder if MS has paid off game developers and hardware makers to ensure that the top games aren't natively supported on open source platforms.
I've always loved gaming on my Linux systems, but more and more the good games aren't supported.
I understand demand and all that but not having top games keeps Linux off a lot of systems. How can they take up PC market share if they can't showcase their power with a large base of gaming fans.
It's honestly one of the main reasons that I'm typing this from a Windows machine at this time.
I just hope that in the future, gaming companies realize that if they put the linux installer on the last disc, Like Unreal did in the past, they will appeal to everyone. It can't be that hard to port. Then if Linux or any other system runs the games faster, you'll see more folks gain interest in other platforms.
So why not? If Linux or Solaris adopted a direct to hardware model like Sun used to have with Suntools and Windows has with its DirectX APIs I expect they would both handily push Vista right out of contention.
What?! Windows did not have the best NVIDIA performance?!
This is a new one. No, really. Usually NVIDIA makes their Windows drivers their best drivers, and Linux is supported as an afterthought because they can make a few percentage points more in sales this way, and because it discourages reverse engineering their hardware, since those who would take the time and effort to do so won't on account of there being a working solution.
In other words, I am surprised that although Windows Vista has been such a mess in terms of compatibility and speed, that even the NVIDIA benchmarks put it last.
Then the introductory piece simply mentions one Linux distro: Ubuntu.
AtomBOB suggests a Phoronix review comparing the performance of a Quadro graphics card on Windows Vista Ultimate, Solaris Express Developer, and Ubuntu Linux.My question is: Since when has Ubuntu Linux represented the entire Linux community? There are over 200 Linux distros of which Ubuntu is but just one.
One could say that it's very popular but at my last check, PCLinuxOS was more popular. http://www.distrowatch.com/ agrees. There is a lot I do not agree with when it comes to Ubuntu and I am not surprised that it's not performing that well.
I thought the nVidia Linux drivers don't get enough performance out of the cards to do good video framerates on Linux, or good alpha blending for compositing "picture in picture" or GUI overlays on top of the images.
Maybe that's on the latest (higher) models of cards, which actually have the performance to do TV. How come those frequently-complained driver limits don't appear in these benchmarks?
--
make install -not war
Gaming cards traditionally follow workstation cards in time.
What's significant here is that Windows has lost it's graphics crown. DRM and bloat or industry defection for the same reasons, we all know the root cause. Free software is simply cleaner and works better. If the ability to run DirectX 9 under Wine was not enough to move gamers to Linux, this is. Things can only go downhill for Microsoft now. Free drivers will be even cleaner and the performance gap will widen.
One more step towards Desktop Linux. But we need some real games to use these 3D capabilities!
Persian Project Management Software as a Service
Not only that, the benchmark runs on OpenGL and not DirectX. A DirectX might be significantly faster on Windows. Reason being that Nvidia optimizes drivers for DirectX for windows and OpenGL for other platforms, because of usage patterns to get the best ROI.
This space for rent.
I have it on good authority that the next Windows Driver Model will run Crysis on 3 SLI 8800GTs and render it in 8-bit color at 640x480 resolution at over 50 FPS! So take that you Linux/Unix hippy beatnik freaks!
Dude,
different distributions mean just different packaging systems, artwork, support, etc. Underlying kernel and drivers are the same. The performance is essentially the same, especially for things like graphics subsystem!
Was Aero turned off? DWM.exe introduces extra frame-buffering overheads in Vista that can be easily turned off by turning Aero (glass effects) off.
It is now official. Netcraft confirms: *BSD is dying
One more crippling bombshell hit the already beleaguered *BSD community when IDC confirmed that *BSD market share has dropped yet again, now down to less than a fraction of 1 percent of all servers. Coming on the heels of a recent Netcraft survey which plainly states that *BSD has lost more market share, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. *BSD is collapsing in complete disarray, as fittingly exemplified by failing dead last in the recent Sys Admin comprehensive networking test.
You don't need to be the Amazing Kreskin to predict *BSD's future. The hand writing is on the wall: *BSD faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for *BSD because *BSD is dying. Things are looking very bad for *BSD. As many of us are already aware, *BSD continues to lose market share. Red ink flows like a river of blood.
FreeBSD is the most endangered of them all, having lost 93% of its core developers. The sudden and unpleasant departures of long time FreeBSD developers Jordan Hubbard and Mike Smith only serve to underscore the point more clearly. There can no longer be any doubt: FreeBSD is dying.
Let's keep to the facts and look at the numbers.
OpenBSD leader Theo states that there are 7000 users of OpenBSD. How many users of NetBSD are there? Let's see. The number of OpenBSD versus NetBSD posts on Usenet is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 NetBSD users. BSD/OS posts on Usenet are about half of the volume of NetBSD posts. Therefore there are about 700 users of BSD/OS. A recent article put FreeBSD at about 80 percent of the *BSD market. Therefore there are (7000+1400+700)*4 = 36400 FreeBSD users. This is consistent with the number of FreeBSD Usenet posts.
Due to the troubles of Walnut Creek, abysmal sales and so on, FreeBSD went out of business and was taken over by BSDI who sell another troubled OS. Now BSDI is also dead, its corpse turned over to yet another charnel house.
All major surveys show that *BSD has steadily declined in market share. *BSD is very sick and its long term survival prospects are very dim. If *BSD is to survive at all it will be among OS dilettante dabblers. *BSD continues to decay. Nothing short of a miracle could save it at this point in time. For all practical purposes, *BSD is dead.
Fact: *BSD is dying
"I am surprised by this as I would have thought Nvidia would have put more effort into their Vista driver with Linux drivers being mostly on the back burner."
Nvidia is putting a lot of effort into their Vista drivers. The problem is that Windows Vista just plain sucks ass, and there's nothing Nvidia can do about that. They're probably thinking what most other people (including Microsoft, more than likely) are thinking... write Vista off as another WinME-type loser, and wait for the next Windows OS, which promises to be must more responsive with the MiniWin kernel.
Life is hard, and the world is cruel
bulk oF the FreeBSD
I've known this for quite some time. Back when i regularly played Quake 3 i used to do benchmarks on linux and windows boxen. The benchmarks involved nothing more than a timedemo with the same settings. The linux version always came out faster by 5-10 FPS.
Nvidia does well under Linux with these Workstation cards because the workstation market is targetted to the high end usage under Linux with low's to mid's handled by Windows. If you want to see a "true" comparison, Phoronix should have tested the same generation chip consumer card under Windows Vista/XP/Linux/Solaris. Omitting XP makes any real OS specific determinations impossible.
I have to call BS on that. If I have to choose between the latest versions of Open Office and Microsoft Office, I will take M$'s closed solution hands down. The interface on 2007 is vastly improved over other office offerings out there. Making something free and open source does not make it good. I can think of many free applications that don't make the grade in cleanness and usability when compared to commercial offerings.
Well ok, let's be careful here. Ubuntu as a whole performs better than Vista according to the article. But it leaves out a little too much "why" for me. I don't want to say "the driver is faster" because there is a lot more in the underlying OS for all three OSs. Also, I want to see Fedora, Suse and Debian. If you do the search for "Mainstream, Intel Compatible" Linux OSs on linux.org (the first hit in google) Ubuntu doesn't even show up. How can you expect a standard gamer to even find the OS except by knowing a Linux geek. Ubuntu is still to niche to run a "real live" scenario test on. Use debian or fedora and you'll be more likely to hit what a normal user would use.
Latest NVIDIA drivers 7800GTX card and the new KDE and gnome with there transparent windows are jerky and slow. This is 2008 ppl.
60% of Microsoft's revenues now come from outside the U.S.
Microsoft has been reporting 15% growth in revenues the U.S., 20 to 30% growth abroad each quarter. This isn't the picture of a company on the way down, it is the picture of a company on the way up.
Microsoft's strength in Europe is astonishing given the entrenched resistance, the take-no-prisoners mood of the EU bureaucracy.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
My guess is 'a lot.'
Who's actually surprised by this? Bueller? Bueller?
The Quadro boards allow OpenGL stereoscopic images to be displayed in a window, and the non-Quadro boards do not. If you want really good 3D, you need a Quadro.
I use them for my stereoscopic video stuff with either a pair of shutter glasses or 3D HMD goggles, and can do a live, 3D viewfinder to compose the scene, align cameras, etc.
What sort of rubbish is that? Even if it would speed things up (which it wouldn't, not really) there's no way a card could figure out which textures to "hide".
The difference is partly in the capabilities, eg. Pro cards can do two-sided lighting, and partly in the drivers. Drivers for "pro" cards are more conservative (not always the very latest release), do more validation of input data, and are therefore a little bit slower.
PS: The difference in features is completely artificial, I've "added" two sided lighting to a consumer card by moving a resistor on top of the GPU.
No sig today...
That is the only way this could have happened! Everybody knows that Vista is the fastest OS our there no matter what some stupid test after test say! http://fakesteveballmer.blogspot.com/
With Windows and Office, Microsoft enjoys the advantage of strong network effects (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_effect) that make their technically mediocre products more attractive.
To some extent such network effects exist with cars too (a repair shop that knows GM cars in every village), but they are arguably weaker and could be overcome by Toyota with significantly better quality.
Right now, Microsoft's network effects are in danger because governments increasingly insist on open standards that can be implemented by everyone. Microsoft tries to obstruct this as long as possible, see
-the attempt to push OOXML (poorly defined pseudo-standard that mostly describes Microsoft Office with all its faults) through ISO instead of supporting PDF.
-their delay in publishing the server interface documentation, until the EU hit them with a large fine.
But this time I think they will lose, because the EU commission is not as docile as the Bush government was in the US antitrust suit against Microsoft (I still think the judgment in the first instance, braking up Microsoft, would have been appropriate).
Also, they have pretty strong opposition in IBM concerning the OOXML-as-ISO-standard business.
C - the footgun of programming languages
Cool, moreover the GNU/Linux graphic stack is being remade to give developers even more control and ultimate horse power. We are still waiting for the UT3 64bits linux native client thought. But that's fine, since it will rock like Quakes, Dooms etc etc... If you want to get more games on GNU/Linux (32 bits and 64 bits), buy the games from those who make the effort to make a native version and let everybody know you play with it using GNU/Linux (don't forget 64 bits systems plz!).
since the last benchmark showed that the xp machine beat everyone - why not include xp for this video card on this benchmark?
it would have been nice to see how much xp beats vista (even though we know that xp is better than vista for gaming)
XP is over. Sooner than you would like, new graphics cards are going to come with nothing but Vista drivers or Vista and Linux drivers.
I was about to say, "Said the pot to the kettle," but that's way too obvious with this post. I mean, in the best case scenario, this assumes that "M$ lackey" is an ad-hominem on some level. The OP quoted Ed's own profile, his description of himself fits the definition of "M$ lackey". But then to spew a half-dozen real ad-hominem attacks, that's more comic irony than anything. Well, that would assume that the AC who posted it was actually trying to be funny and wasn't just a M$ lackey who's taken offense.
Speaking of ad-hominem attacks, though, the M$ lackey who was originally being discussed, Ed Bott, launched into a bunch of what could be considered indirect ad-hominems as he babbled about just how BAD Gutmann's paper is (as he implies that Gutmann is ignorant, inexperienced, a liar, a sloppy & disorganized writer, and he distorts the truth, etc.). When I first read Bott's article around the time it came out, I was struck by how it seemed to be more of a rambling tirade directed at someone who gave M$ a bit of a black eye than a rebuttal that offered any appreciable substance. That's a personal tone that I don't feel is all that appropriate in tech journalism.
That said, I don't think that "lackey" characterizes Bott correctly. The description of "M$ sycophant" is far more apropos for him.