[QUOTE=Hibbelharry;n1355635]
in a perfect world, things should just magically work and read people's minds. but that's a perfect world, utopian thinking. real world, things don't work that way. the control panel is about basic control. its about tweaking, its about monitoring, its about enabling and disabling stuff because not everything is universal. and this may come to a surprise, but there are people that use their video cards as more than just a display adapter.
here is my radeon control panel on windows 11:
the control panel gives a stupid easy way to configure fan profiles and other stuff like overclocking, underclocking, boost behavior, etc. i use it because i hate zero rpm and always disable, and stock firmware fan control maxes out at 50% fan speed and i set it to max out at 100%. cooler the card, the higher it boosts itself. but sadly, you have people who care more about muh sound, than muh performance.:

provides basic stats of the gpu + even the rest of the system:

has an ability to record game play:

per video game settings and even records basic stuff like average fps per game and how many hours of game play:

you DO NOT want radeon chill enabled and "just work" universally. that is subjective and per game basis and NOT EVERY SINGLE PERSON WILL WANT IT ENABLED. same thing goes with super resolution, image sharpening, and other features like enhanced sync, or enabling disabling freesync in certain games because some rare occasions you might have flickering problems or crashes with it enabled.

if linux ever wants to grow in the enthusiast market, with out a doubt stuff like amd gpus need a control panel for at bare minimum overclocking support. overclocking scene is big and there are a lot of people that don't even game, they just love overclocking and run benchmarks. i never understood why linux didn't try to really focus on that market. you have people who love tweaking hardware and tweaking their system to extract every last drop of performance. with linux open nature, linux is a dream in the tweaking regard. where you can go as far as mess with your kernel and run your own custom kernel. linux SHOULD be the defacto overclocking and benchmarking platform.
but ranting aside, i would love for amd to finally have an official supported control panel on linux that provides similar functionality.
Originally posted by Danny3
View Post
here is my radeon control panel on windows 11:
the control panel gives a stupid easy way to configure fan profiles and other stuff like overclocking, underclocking, boost behavior, etc. i use it because i hate zero rpm and always disable, and stock firmware fan control maxes out at 50% fan speed and i set it to max out at 100%. cooler the card, the higher it boosts itself. but sadly, you have people who care more about muh sound, than muh performance.:

provides basic stats of the gpu + even the rest of the system:

has an ability to record game play:

per video game settings and even records basic stuff like average fps per game and how many hours of game play:

you DO NOT want radeon chill enabled and "just work" universally. that is subjective and per game basis and NOT EVERY SINGLE PERSON WILL WANT IT ENABLED. same thing goes with super resolution, image sharpening, and other features like enhanced sync, or enabling disabling freesync in certain games because some rare occasions you might have flickering problems or crashes with it enabled.

if linux ever wants to grow in the enthusiast market, with out a doubt stuff like amd gpus need a control panel for at bare minimum overclocking support. overclocking scene is big and there are a lot of people that don't even game, they just love overclocking and run benchmarks. i never understood why linux didn't try to really focus on that market. you have people who love tweaking hardware and tweaking their system to extract every last drop of performance. with linux open nature, linux is a dream in the tweaking regard. where you can go as far as mess with your kernel and run your own custom kernel. linux SHOULD be the defacto overclocking and benchmarking platform.
but ranting aside, i would love for amd to finally have an official supported control panel on linux that provides similar functionality.
Comment