Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

7.12 - speculation time...

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #71
    Originally posted by Svartalf View Post
    It may be irritating to you, but it's still a valid comment, whether you're able to act upon it or not.

    YOU (and for that matter, I) may not be able to do anything of the sort for now on some of our machines, but getting all bent out of shape is as sophomoric as the people you're labeling "sophomoric", unfortunately.



    Here's another news flash... When you bought the laptop, you had to have known issues were present with the ATI support and bought anyway- either because you expected them to get it straightened out (Myself, for example...) or expect the open source drivers to fix the mess this stuff's in. Unfortunately, the drivers never were all that great. They ALWAYS have had crippling problems with the drivers, especially with the laptop parts. Hypermemory not working right being one of them. Overall performance being another one. Even now, it seems they have a mixed bag with the performance problems- something that actually could be helped out by them running Oprofile on the offending stuff while the driver with symbols not stripped out is running.



    Depends on what you're needing.

    If you're willing to wait (and wait, and wait...) for the stuff to gel, or don't have budget to buy a new machine, yes, you'll need to just wait. If you've got budget and are unable or unwilling to wait (I had budget and COULDN'T wait...) you honestly need to evaluate your answer and buy accordingly. I bought an NVidia GPU based laptop as the answer. And, for desktop users, it's even less of a big issue- it's all hinging on budget.

    I can't, in all conscience, tell someone to wait unless that's all they have at their disposal. If you've got the choice to change, then NVidia followed by Intel is your only good choices right at the moment. Perhaps 7.12 will resolve some of these issues- I'm hopeful, but I'm not betting on it.

    Never mistake my comments as being "buy an NVidia, tee hee, hee..." as you put it. It's the statement of grim reality here that I make. You'll note that I'm in here trying to get them to fix things and off and on offering insight or encouragement. That's because I, too have ATI hardware, even in laptops.

    But, I can't be honestly doing what you're doing or what several others have resorted to (Telling someone "GTFO" is very, very sophomoric...) either.

    Especially in light of embarassing things like that memory leak that is spawned with one of the simplest OpenGL apps on Linux.
    I won't use a term as strong as GTFO again as it can easily be taken the wrong way.

    I am not an ATI fan boy (fanboi or whatever). I was still a windows user when I bought my ATI card as it was by far the most powerful AGP card I could get my hands on. nVidia have been behind ATI on releasing new cards for AGP.

    The last 8 months of fglrx releases haven't worked properly on my AGP card, why would I still be a fanboi or sophomoric about ATI?

    I'll say again it's not what was said but the way it was said. Laughing at us because we bought an ATI card is simply not very nice.

    I'm not sure what I would do if I had to buy a new video card now. I either buy the more powerful ATI card and hope that the drivers get fixed or buy a lesser nVidia AGP card and hope that works.

    I've learnt theres no guarantee with drivers from either nVidia or ATI. My motherboard is not supported by nVidia under Vista and the most recent "WHQL signed" drivers for XP kill your windows install - BSOD even in safe mode. Two Catalyst releases didn't work properly for my video card under windows so your not even safe running just windows.

    Comment


    • #72
      I'm guessing the driver will be out next week (December 20th is my guess), I look forward to it. Hopefully it will be the one.

      Comment


      • #73
        Originally posted by Crunchy View Post
        I won't use a term as strong as GTFO again as it can easily be taken the wrong way.
        This works. That's the main reason why I kept mentioning it. Choice of words is an important thing, especially when you're responding to people like you were doing- what you chose, really wasn't a good choice, if you think about it. If you're not going to be labeled as a fanboy, you shouldn't have resorted to that one...

        I am not an ATI fan boy (fanboi or whatever). I was still a windows user when I bought my ATI card as it was by far the most powerful AGP card I could get my hands on. nVidia have been behind ATI on releasing new cards for AGP.
        The reality is, that AGP is largely no longer available on a motherboard and actually complicates most designs. At some point, they won't be releasing even the bridged PCI-E parts- probably within the next couple of years. It's just too complicated, too expensive. And I agree, if you want a real performer, you want AMD's stuff for AGP right now. Sadly, the devices just don't perform under Linux, even moreso than the PCI-E parts right now.

        The last 8 months of fglrx releases haven't worked properly on my AGP card, why would I still be a fanboi or sophomoric about ATI?
        Unfortunately the response you gave to people expressing their frustration at the current state of affairs and that they were getting NVidia instead (Not "get an NVidia, naaa, naaa!" like you claim was going on...) was- you may not have saw it that way, but that was what it came across as. It was after your GTFO comment that the fanboy crap started really coming out.

        I'll say again it's not what was said but the way it was said. Laughing at us because we bought an ATI card is simply not very nice.
        The laughing didn't start until your GTFO comment, unfortunately. And, I'll simply point out your own comments there and refer you to what started this whole brouhaha. Seeing as you're saying no more GTFO choices, I'll only offer that you might want to work at not being so touchy about people indicating that NVidia's the better choice for now. Because, it actually is, for Linux users, right now. Go look at all my comments on the forums on the subject- that's how I'm handling it. That's how I've always handled
        it.

        I'm not sure what I would do if I had to buy a new video card now. I either buy the more powerful ATI card and hope that the drivers get fixed or buy a lesser nVidia AGP card and hope that works.
        Or, you could upgrade your system... Like I said, we're at the threshold where you may not get an AGP part all that easy in the relative near future- and have to pay a lot more, no matter if it's NVidia or AMD. As it stands, if you're talking PCI-E, it's kind of a toss-up. On paper AMD's stuff is better. But, in reality, the drivers for NVidia realize more of their total potential, when compared to AMD's stuff.

        I've learnt theres no guarantee with drivers from either nVidia or ATI. My motherboard is not supported by nVidia under Vista and the most recent "WHQL signed" drivers for XP kill your windows install - BSOD even in safe mode. Two Catalyst releases didn't work properly for my video card under windows so your not even safe running just windows.
        Heh... There's a reason why I'm eager to see what Intel comes up with and whether AMD gives us enough information to do real Open Sourced 3D drivers in a timely manner. This is not to say that we've not had our own brown paper bag moments, but the swiftness of the fix and the frequency of the incidents NOT happening is high enough that I think we'll do fine (and so will AMD) when it all gets in place.

        Unfortunately for all of us, that's NOT the case right now and until the proprietary driver HONESTLY gels better (It's no way, no how, in shape right at the moment...), other brands are better choices for people unless they're the brave of heart.

        Comment


        • #74
          Originally posted by Tsume View Post
          Judging by past releases, Windows wise, it's usually between the last 2/3 of the month and the end of the month. It will be there in time for Christmas though... heck we might get it right on the 25th with a "Merry Xmas" message in the installer somewhere =P
          As usual, we will get it with the "Merry Xmas" message in the right corner of the desktop.

          Comment


          • #75
            Originally posted by sergus View Post
            As usual, we will get it with the "Merry Xmas" message in the right corner of the desktop.
            I always thought the message in the bottom right was an advert for nVidia

            Comment


            • #76
              Originally posted by Tsume View Post
              I always thought the message in the bottom right was an advert for nVidia
              Hey, now... Don't be doing that sort of thing, please?

              We just came to some semblance of an understanding here over this sort of junk and you're being just like a kid hammering on a blasting cap with a rock.

              If you're going to post snarky comments about AMD products like that, save it for the name-the-driver-version thread. That's where it belongs anyhow...

              Comment


              • #77
                Originally posted by Svartalf View Post
                Hey, now... Don't be doing that sort of thing, please?

                We just came to some semblance of an understanding here over this sort of junk and you're being just like a kid hammering on a blasting cap with a rock.

                If you're going to post snarky comments about AMD products like that, save it for the name-the-driver-version thread. That's where it belongs anyhow...
                It was a joke =P

                I in no way endorse or suggest the policy of "hey, Ati's drivers suck omg buy nvidia stupid" - I ignored all of those posts and pretended they weren't here. Usually lack of attention drives away fanbois :P

                It was pretty snarky though!

                For the record, I dislike nVidia and their unstable/unsupported Windows drivers. (Man this sentence is probably going to piss someone off, sorry whoever is offended!) I would rather recommend someone an ATi card for Linux and just wait for a better driver than to give nVidia money, IMO.

                On a side note I actually had a dream about Catalyst 7.12 last night. It gave the xserver an Xmas ATI splash screen, fixed all of the major bugs plaguing it, made everyone love ATi, and ran OpenGL games -faster- than nVidia. I don't know what's more disturbing, the fact that this will eventually happen (you bet it will! AMD loves linux!) or the fact that I dreamt about a hardware driver =/ I'm such a nerd.

                Comment


                • #78
                  @Tsume: your dreams are really funny *hahaha*

                  Comment


                  • #79
                    i thought ati card + linux = recipe for nightmare

                    Comment


                    • #80
                      ati card + linux = challenge. that's why i bought an ati card, instead of nvidia, for a change :]

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X