Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

AMD Radeon HD 4290 On Linux

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

  • TheCycoONE
    replied
    HTPC?

    @Devis: Thanks for the input. I had discounted integrated Nvidia because they hadn't been making anything recently and I didn't see any AM3 nvidia boards; so knowing they're out their means I'll look around some more. I think gaming would be pretty much limited to Hedgewars, it was mostly for XBMC and videos.

    Leave a comment:


  • devius
    replied
    Oh and BTW desktop effects also run just fine on my old Athlon XP 2400+ with Radeon 9500Pro also with the open source drivers, so anything newer than that is probably guaranteed to work, unless there is some kind of bug somehwere.

    Leave a comment:


  • devius
    replied
    Originally posted by BlueJayofEvil View Post
    I'm considering an 890GX-based system with the 4290 specifically for a small multimedia-centric desktop. I'm curious about Compiz/KWin performance on this chipset. Has anybody tested the 4290 chipset with desktop effects turned on?
    Desktop effects run just fine with 785G's HD4200 using the open source drivers, so they will probably run just as fine on 890GX.

    Leave a comment:


  • sylware
    replied
    Hu?
    You say there is a GNU/Linux Debian Ubuntu build optimized for AMD?

    Leave a comment:


  • BlueJayofEvil
    replied
    I'm considering an 890GX-based system with the 4290 specifically for a small multimedia-centric desktop. I'm curious about Compiz/KWin performance on this chipset. Has anybody tested the 4290 chipset with desktop effects turned on?

    Leave a comment:


  • devius
    replied
    Originally posted by TheCycoONE View Post
    I'm looking to build a budget low-power HTPC (combined client/server), but I'd rather not use proprietary drivers. Having seen your disappointing benchmark of the Core i3 integrated and now this I don't know what to buy.
    If you want to go the nvidia way there are still some geforce8200/8300 AM3 motherboards if you look around, although AFAIK they are all DDR2 models. They can be paired with an Athlon II X3, like the one used in this review, that can easily be operated at lower than stock voltages. My Athlon II X4 is running completely stable at 1,225V although I haven't tested lower voltages yet. This would be a really low power system and very cheap.

    Leave a comment:


  • Nighthog
    replied
    For desktop usage and desktop effects I would say it would still be good enough. Gaming is a rather different aspect all together.

    You have Xv CPU bound playback whit the open source drivers. Though whit my own HD3200 whit fresh install of Ubuntu 10.4 the Xv isn't flawless. Though I must say I haven't checked in on tweaking playback yet which I've done over in the Windows side.
    There are a few tearing artifacts now and then I noticed, then the lack of a yet found Re-clock alternative for 24p->25p real time PAL speedup. Which is a thing I really really like

    Though I must say there should be more "games" in the test.

    Whit a HD3200 I can manage quite well over at the Windows side even concerning gaming at 1920x1200 resolution.

    I play Stepmania 3.9 & 4.0 all good. I even play Oblivion whit just there in the "playbale" fps in 1920x1200. Though I have far from maximized the settings.

    There is quite a lot of power in there if you look at it right. Then there are loads of old games...

    But the main thing... I think it's not completely fair to only test the integrated graphics in a full-hd resolution of 1920x1080p. If you play games I think many will use lower resolutions!

    Leave a comment:


  • TheCycoONE
    replied
    HTPC?

    "If you're interested in video playback under Linux for an HTPC system, you're really best off buying a NVIDIA graphics card that supports VDPAU for the best Linux video experience possible using NVIDIA's binary drivers."

    Is that really necessary? I'm looking to build a budget low-power HTPC (combined client/server), but I'd rather not use proprietary drivers. Having seen your disappointing benchmark of the Core i3 integrated and now this I don't know what to buy.

    Leave a comment:


  • nanonyme
    replied
    Originally posted by waucka View Post
    Question: why the hell is AMD being so secretive about XvBA? It's just an API! WTF? Not that I care about having access to it myself; I use the open-source driver.
    Isn't it just a good thing AMD isn't pushing their own decoding API on Linux? There are already way too many.

    Leave a comment:


  • waucka
    replied
    Question: why the hell is AMD being so secretive about XvBA? It's just an API! WTF? Not that I care about having access to it myself; I use the open-source driver.

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X