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NVIDIA Transitioning To Official, Open-Source Linux GPU Kernel Driver

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  • Originally posted by Danny3 View Post



    We already have an ongoing pandemic and a war, besides the large scale cracking and leaks, so the hell is probably freezing over...
    It's the year when everything is happening!
    Who knows, it might be the year of Linux too!
    Don't forget the CSAM regulation proposal to ban end to end encryption in the EU.
    Allegedly democratic governments are turning more and more authoritarian, while traditional auhtoritarian governments and parties are growing bolder/stronger.

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    • Wow, just saw a flying pig through my window. Is hell freezing?

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      • I can't complain since it is really a step forward, so thanks NVIDIA, but I still want free firmware sources and a way to run it unsigned or signed with customer keys. DRM doesn't have to work then. If competitiors are equally bad, that only motivates me to buy nothing or the cheapest I can get.

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        • Originally posted by Murple View Post
          Call me when they want to talk about open source firmware. I'm sorry, but FUCK NVIDIA
          You could direct your swearing towards YOURSELF. Neither AMD, nor Intel release open source firmware for their GPUs.

          I knew some Open Source zealots have troubles with common sense and logic, but your message has trumped by a wide margin pretty much all the negative comments here.

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          • Originally posted by Flaburgan View Post
            This definitely isn't as big as you want it to be: https://twitter.com/marcan42/status/1524615058688724992
            Two likes here, and lots of extra for the twitter post, yet all of you are kinda ... completely out of your minds.

            This firmware runs inside the NVIDIA GPUs using the RISC instruction set, it's never executed on the host PC.

            And God forbid AMD and Intel also have closed firmware which no one knows what it does.

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            • Originally posted by arunbupathy View Post
              I would also add to my last post that I will truly consider nVidia good if they open up the CUDA API/ABIs for everybody else. That way other vendors can provide CUDA implementations, and existing CUDA applications can be used as-is, without jumping through a million hoops.
              CUDA API is open. If you want to implement it on your GPU, NVIDIA won't stop you.

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              • That's certainly good news, big step in the right direction. But it's also too little too late, given where all the competitors are, and have been for years. Even the Mali problem on the ARM side has been solved a lot earlier.
                I'll continue boycotting nvidia until they open up the userland parts (or enable Nouveau or some other project to provide a viable Open Source alternative).

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                • Originally posted by Monsterovich View Post
                  NVidia, fuck you... less.
                  Kinda sums up Open Source/Linux zealots' attitude: WE CAN HATE, WE HATE, WE WILL HATE.

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                  • Originally posted by birdie View Post

                    You could direct your swearing towards YOURSELF. Neither AMD, nor Intel release open source firmware for their GPUs.

                    I knew some Open Source zealots have troubles with common sense and logic, but your message has trumped by a wide margin pretty much all the negative comments here.
                    Why do people keep bringing up AMD and Intel? AMD I don't use so not really interested in (personally) and Intel are *of course* worse with their "management engines".

                    My point is that we shouldn't be celebrating companies moving more code into firmware and yet pretending they are becoming more open. They are not. They are becoming more closed.

                    You are right though, I am an open source zealot.

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                    • Originally posted by berolinux View Post
                      That's certainly good news, big step in the right direction. But it's also too little too late, given where all the competitors are, and have been for years. Even the Mali problem on the ARM side has been solved a lot earlier.
                      I'll continue boycotting nvidia until they open up the userland parts (or enable Nouveau or some other project to provide a viable Open Source alternative).
                      Late? Late in what? Linux on the desktop is still below 2% just like it was 30 years ago. And this development will change absolutely nothing.

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