@AlbertP
First of all the nvidia installer does NOT support ubuntu 10.04 and up. It worked with older u systems and it works with debian. As the installer does not use dkms i added a dkms enable part into my nvidia script on my own, therefore kernel updates are painless now. However when parts of the nv driver are updated - like xorg or mesa updates - then you still need to rerun the nv installer. That's always the case when you use the pure nvidia install code. If you use u you can NOT use that but you have to use a ppa for the latest code. If you mix that with the installer it is your fault. In theory it would be possible to update a prepackaged driver with correct lib dir overrides, but i would not try that.
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Wihout AMD/ATI's open source strategy i wouldnt even consider to buy it
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If you read the Linux Mint forum, where people can install both drivers from the repository, you will see much more NVidia problems than ATI. The ATI driver is very reliable and the repository's fglrx package works fine in most cases. While with NVidia, you often have to reinstall or retry installing. And there are many people still having problems (the infamous 'run `nvidia-settings` as root' error) when the driver is finally installed. Or the driver is installed, but it just does not load, causing the system to return to vesa or nv.
But I agree, NVidia is often faster to support newer kernel / X server versions and still supports older cards in their legacy drivers. If your computer is very new and you want to use the proprietary driver, NVidia may have better support. But if you want to use the open-source driver, I would prefer ATI over NVidia as Nouveau packaged with distros does not yet contain open-source firmware for Fermi. And the first Fermi's have already been released a year ago.Last edited by AlbertP; 26 May 2011, 04:43 AM.
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@DeepDayze
In most cases there are 3rd party patches for fglrx for better kernel support. But something you usually can not fix on your own is new xserver support (it was possible in one case as only the versioning changed, there i binary patched fglrx) is missing newer xserver support. For that nvidia provides updates faster (at least for the current drivers). When a distro like Fedora was shipping a new xserver often fglrx was not ready. Only when Ubuntu shipped new xserver then they add they support - often for the first time with an U only hotfix driver.
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Originally posted by AlbertP View PostWe all know what happened with Sandy Bridge, but now Intel have learned from it and already merged the first Ivy Bridge support into the 2.6.40/2.8.0/3.0(.0) kernel. While most graphics cards work quite well out-of-the-box at the moment, except Sandy Bridge, NVidia is still a problem because they don't help open-source development as the only major graphics vendor and their proprietary driver is even worse than ATI's.
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We all know what happened with Sandy Bridge, but now Intel have learned from it and already merged the first Ivy Bridge support into the 2.6.40/2.8.0/3.0(.0) kernel. While most graphics cards work quite well out-of-the-box at the moment, except Sandy Bridge, NVidia is still a problem because they don't help open-source development as the only major graphics vendor and their proprietary driver is even worse than ATI's.
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Having Linux Support For Your Hardware At Launch
Phoronix: Having Linux Support For Your Hardware At Launch
Support for running Linux on new hardware -- whether it be motherboards, wireless adapters, graphics cards, or complete systems -- has largely eased up in the past few years. As can be seen from Phoronix reviews of new hardware at launch, in many cases there is Linux support available (e.g. with AMD's launch today of the FirePro V5900 and FirePro V7900 there is already Catalyst support) that continues to be refined over time whether it be in closed or open-source drivers. Even for vendors committed towards delivering open-source Linux hardware support, the path to new hardware enablement is not easy...
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