The key thing about xorg7.4/xserver1.5 being included with Fedora 9 is that it was SUPPOSED to be released LONG ago.
Check this page: http://www.x.org/wiki/Releases?actio...t=XorgReleases -- says that 7.4/1.5 was intended to be released back in MAY. F9 was released in May. Now here we are 3 months later and still no 7.4/1.5. It was xorg that dropped the ball on this one, not Fedora, and not AMD.
The good news is that what we have is stable enough to actually use, as well as the points made by Thetargos above.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Guess what? Yet another disgruntled Fedora+ATI Customer
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by m4rgin4l View PostThanks for your answer. It was very informative and it convinced me that perhaps the best way to go right now is install Fedora 8 on my desktop.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by Thetargos View PostYou won't support closed drivers, and yet you complain about ATi not supporting XServer 1.5 with their binary blob? As I said above, maybe ATi is waiting for the code to stabilize enough before publicly supporting it.
Thanks for your answer. It was very informative and it convinced me that perhaps the best way to go right now is install Fedora 8 on my desktop.
Leave a comment:
-
I'll read the other responses later, first I want to address this from Fedora-user to Fedora-user, ktxs.
Originally posted by m4rgin4l View PostI'll write the conclusion first and try to explain it later: If you're a die-hard Fedora fan (as I am) and you like using 3D on Linux, stay as far away as possible from ATI latest products. Now the explanation.
Originally posted by m4rgin4l View Post...
But, I'm a (proud) Fedora user and apparently, and it seems that's a bit of a sin for ATI (the Fedora part, not the proud part). Here's why:
* The closed source drivers won't work on Xserver 1.5. The only solution for this is downgrading the Xserver (which beats the whole point of using Fedora), or install Ubuntu or another supported distro. No thanks, I support innovation (and so should ATI).
Originally posted by m4rgin4l View Post* The free software drivers that supposedly support the chipset can only give the bare minimum of functionality (using the latest from the git repo), no 2D acceleration, no 3D acceleration. Just a glorified VESA driver.
Originally posted by m4rgin4l View PostWhen Fedora 9 was released, I had my old card (an NVIDIA 8600GT), and it only took a few days for NVIDIA to release a barely working driver first, and a fully functional one a little later. That's support. But, I won't go back to NVIDIA 'cause I don't want to support the close-driver model any more.
Originally posted by m4rgin4l View PostAll I can do now is learn my lesson the hard way.
Originally posted by m4rgin4l View PostSo the moral of the story is: If you're a Fedora user, don't buy the latest products from ATI, if you don't mind closed-source drivers, buy NVIDIA.
XServer 1.5 in Fedora 9, why it was a Good Thing?
First of all, I'm not fully aware about actual dates here, BUT back when a key Red Hat employee was appointed XServer Release Manager, Fedora 9 was still in its testing phase, and early XServer 1.5 was included in the distribution. I'm sure the intention was to try and get XServer 1.5 enough testing during this period so that it could be released with Fedora 9 or shortly after... Alas, this never happened. However two good things did happen:
- XServer got more testing and the code got more mature by the greater exposure that including it with a release version of Fedora had. This doesn't mean that it is going to be released soon, but at least meant that the hiatus surrounding XServer 1.5 stopped, and development was continued.
- It is also true that many users have opted to downgrade their Xorg versions so that they can make use of the closed blobs from ATi and nVidia with Sulphur. However there seems to be quite a bit of users using the distribution as it was intended in the first place.
All in all, the inclusion of XServer 1.5 in Fedora 9 gave the opportunity for testing the code with a wider number of users, many of which, though using a "technical" distributions, may not necessarily be "technically inclined", and more importantly, it has enabled further development on the software and helped bringing it closer to release.
Since Fedora's principles are to construct the distribution entirely off FLOSS code, without any consideration to proprietary binary drivers also meant that by including this critical infrastructural piece of software many users were either "forced" to downgrade Xorg, switch distributions, linger on F8 longer, or (for the better) use the open drivers.
I'm one of the lucky ones in the last group, as the radeonhd driver available for Fedora 9 supports (even with initial and slow DRI support) my RS690 based Radeon X1200 in my laptop. I can't do much gaming with this GPU anyway, so currently I'm quite happy with it (and I'm happy to have compositing and AIGLX with XV[No Compiz, but Metacity's composer, though])
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by m4rgin4l View PostUbuntu Intrepid Ibex (currently in alpha4) is set to be released on October 30th and most likely will use Xserver 1.5 (the latest post feature-freeze alpha uses 1.5RC). I don't know if Xorg 7.4/Xserver 1.5 will be declared stable by that time (who know up to this point), but I guess AMD/ATI will be "forced" to support the most popular distro out there.
The problem which lies here is that there's absolutely no use in supporting "GIT-quality" software (as a company like AMD) because it could change way too heavy and render the whole implementation in a driver useless and require a complete rewrite. This is just a waste of resources and money (and from what I have heard, money is something which AMD is constantly loosing these months).
Leave a comment:
-
Ubuntu Intrepid Ibex (currently in alpha4) is set to be released on October 30th and most likely will use Xserver 1.5 (the latest post feature-freeze alpha uses 1.5RC). I don't know if Xorg 7.4/Xserver 1.5 will be declared stable by that time (who know up to this point), but I guess AMD/ATI will be "forced" to support the most popular distro out there.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by m4rgin4l View PostWhy shouldn't I expect the drivers to work? My notebooks (a Dell and an Eee PC) have an Intel driver that works fantastic, and the NVIDIA drivers work too, and if I had an earlier ATI model, maybe the open source driver would work as well. Anyway, I get your point, I won't complain any further (at least here).
Judging from the latest news, I guess that a broken Linux driver is the least of NVIDIA's concerns right now
I'll check Gentoo's suppor for multiple JVMs. Most likely it can be ported to Fedora. Thanks for the tip.
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by panda84 View PostI think it's not needed. Check this page, paragraph 15.4:
http://docs.fedoraproject.org/releas...S/sn-Java.html
Code:system-switch-java
You can install it by with:
Code:yum install system-switch-java
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by m4rgin4l View PostI'll check Gentoo's suppor for multiple JVMs. Most likely it can be ported to Fedora. Thanks for the tip.
http://docs.fedoraproject.org/releas...S/sn-Java.html
Code:system-switch-java
You can install it by with:
Code:yum install system-switch-java
Leave a comment:
Leave a comment: