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Valve Has Been Developing A New Mesa Vulkan Shader Compiler For Radeon
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Originally posted by msotirovAnd that is why I have no problem with Steam's monopoly. They are a good company that cares about the whole community and not just about profit. Screw all the other launchers who just want a piece of the pie.
As soon as they'd gotten true dominance they'd stop caring whatsoever. Companies only care about revenue.
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Originally posted by bridgman View Post
When you say "quit using RadeonSI" what are you using for OpenGL ? AFAIK your options are either Mesa with RadeonSI or our closed source OpenGL driver from the -PRO packages. I suspect you are using amdgpu kernel driver plus Mesa/RadeonSI GL driver.
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Guest repliedGood on Valve. Even though I have no AMD cards around right now (and it's unlikely I will, I'm waiting for Intel cards to come to market), I still want to support Valve because they try to make gaming better by improving the infrastructure.
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Originally posted by skeevy420 View PostThank goodness AMDGPU worked really well for me with the games I was playing from 2015+ which allowed me to quit using RadeonSI.
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Originally posted by L_A_G View PostI can definitely see the idea behind this, but what worries me somewhat is that this will further fragment AMD drivers on Linux creating something akin to the infamous (and untrue) FUD about how you have to test and debug for loads of different distros if you want to release software on Linux.
Discounting long since discontinued hardware we've already got Mesa with LLVM for those who want as much of their graphics driver stack to be open, AMD's own AMDGPU-PRO for those who want certified drivers and their ROC stack for those who want to do compute with an open stack. As such I hope that this either ends up as a learning experience used for those whose job it is to optimize the LLVM-based stacks or then that it becomes part of the de-facto stack, at least for the open source AMD graphics.
Thank goodness AMDGPU worked really well for me with the games I was playing from 2015+ which allowed me to quit using RadeonSI. I'm glad we have all the choices available, but, honestly, some days it does feel like there are too damn many but they've also saved my ass a few times so I'm not gonna complain that much
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I can definitely see the idea behind this, but what worries me somewhat is that this will further fragment AMD drivers on Linux creating something akin to the infamous (and untrue) FUD about how you have to test and debug for loads of different distros if you want to release software on Linux.
Discounting long since discontinued hardware we've already got Mesa with LLVM for those who want as much of their graphics driver stack to be open, AMD's own AMDGPU-PRO for those who want certified drivers and their ROC stack for those who want to do compute with an open stack. As such I hope that this either ends up as a learning experience used for those whose job it is to optimize the LLVM-based stacks or then that it becomes part of the de-facto stack, at least for the open source AMD graphics.
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Originally posted by msotirovAnd that is why I have no problem with Steam's monopoly. They are a good company that cares about the whole community and not just about profit. Screw all the other launchers who just want a piece of the pie.
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Originally posted by LeJimster View Post
I use vanilla arch as I wanted to learn the process of installing it from scratch, it certainly helped me fix any issues ive run into as I'm more familiar.
For a newbie Manjaro is a good starting point. Like the other guy said, Antergos is excellent (I have it on my parents machine) but they're dropping support for it.
I'm not sure I would use Antergos for server, but its doable of course.
Once some of their more annoying helpers are removed it is like running Arch with an extra layer of testing for the stable branch because Manjaro's Testing is Arch Stable with the Manjaro stuff -- I like Arch, but I also like a stable and very well tested system and Manjaro, due to being downstream from Arch to catch random Stable Repo bugs, is just a more stable OS.
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