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Linux 2.6.28 Promises Year-End Presents

darthcamaro writes "Little penguins all around the world are waiting for Penguin-Master Linus Torvalds to deliver some Glogg inspired Xmas cheer in the form of the new 2.6.28 kernel. Among the innovations in 2.6.28 are ext4 as stable, wireless USB drivers, better KVM support and the GEM graphic memory management technology. 'We now have a proper memory manager for video memory, the GEM [Graphics Execution Manager] memory manager,' Greg Kroah-Hartman said. 'This gives Linux much better graphics performance than it previously had.'"

4 of 305 comments (clear)

  1. Nice start... by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not quite Vista's WDDM abilities in dealing with GPU RAM, but a nice start that people other than MS are actually taking GPU RAM allocation seriously beyond simple context swtiching.

  2. Re:2009 by Shetan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The moderators are drunk on Christmas spirits.

  3. Re:2009 by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's because every year is the year of Linux. Its just funny that some people haven't realized it yet.

  4. Re:To clear somethings up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That really does not impress me.

    You're not supposed to be impressed, you're supposed to be able to easily fix your graphics (or any other driver/configuration) setup with more-or-less your expected setup. Non-expert users will be impressed by that. Or at the very least less pissed off by the problem they're experiencing.

    Cry me a river.

    Yeah, fuck all those people who don't want to learn X configuration file formats off-by-heart! But I bet you'll be the first person bitching and moaning when vendor X doesn't provide Linux drivers and vendor Y's software doesn't support Linux. Newsflash genius, it's the masses that bring the recognition and the cash to make the vendors take notice. If you ever want Linux to do all those things that "Year of Linux" spouters have been droning on about for the last decade you're going to have to realise that making Linux useable, maintainable, and fixable by average Joe's with as little fuss as possible is the only thing that matters to the long term future of Linux as a desktop OS.