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NVIDIA Drops Their Open-Source Driver, Refers Users To VESA
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ughhh fucking nvidia, why oh why do you insist on ass raping me, over and over. Any more of this crap and they will make an ati or s3 user out of me .
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Originally posted by rmstallman View PostTo say that nvidia' motive is to "protect their intellectual property"
is basically vacuous, because "intellectual property" is so vague that
it doesn't mean anything, so it lends itself only to confusion. If
you want to make a clear statement, that's always easier if you avoid
that term. (See http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/not-ipr.html.)
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I think nVidia anti-opensource behavior has nothing to do with actual state of intellectual property law. Of course they are limited, but that does not mean they can not do anything. AMD has same IP "problems" like nVidia, but they were able to deal with them, and release at least specification of their hardware and activelly help to build new OSS driver. Now look at nVidia and think about their IP. Why they refuse to release specification? I hardly believe argument they protect their hardware secrets, because ATI hardware is considered to be superior these days, and ATI use very different strategy.
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Originally posted by rmstallman View PostThe xf86-video-nv driver is described as "open source", and maybe that is true, but I think it isn't free software. If the "source code" is obfuscated, then it isn't real source code. It appears that the real source code for this program is not available, which means it's not free software. Its discontinuation is no loss.
Originally posted by rmstallman View PostTo say that nvidia' motive is to "protect their intellectual property" is basically vacuous, because "intellectual property" is so vague that it doesn't mean anything, so it lends itself only to confusion.
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Originally posted by NeoBrain View Postso I wonder why distributions were bundling that driver at all instead of just falling back to vesa or something
Zero acceleration, you can't even scroll in a browser without getting seasick. No energy management, not all resolutions supported, 50 Hz or something, just nothing. Sometimes it feels like being on Windows 3.11 on a 80286.
(I admit it was the only one capable of firing up my VGA out on the old laptop for presentations though.)
So nv was something that most people would accept and a lot of non-idealists (but more pragmatist) would download the blob later anyway.
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Originally posted by rmstallman View PostThe xf86-video-nv driver is described as "open source", and maybe that
is true, but I think it isn't free software. If the "source code" is
obfuscated, then it isn't real source code. It appears that the real
source code for this program is not available, which means it's not
free software. Its discontinuation is no loss.
To say that nvidia' motive is to "protect their intellectual property"
is basically vacuous, because "intellectual property" is so vague that
it doesn't mean anything, so it lends itself only to confusion. If
you want to make a clear statement, that's always easier if you avoid
that term. (See http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/not-ipr.html.)
Leave a comment:
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OMG. The FOSS guru was here!
Originally posted by rmstallman View PostIts discontinuation is no loss.
So I was still quite happy that nv was around.
Of course if nouveau will be finished it will be the far better alternative (even though it is probably mainly made "just" be reverse engineering).
Originally posted by rmstallman"intellectual property"
A real int. property is hard to imagine since everything we build is made upon the knowledge and research of our forefathers (and mothers, 'kay). As a chemist I know that well. And I know that all I do is recombine the things I learned and found in publications to create something new. But still all this is based upon research that started in the early days of mankind (making fire e.g.). So how could I call that property?
I like to speak of intellectual work or an int. achievement.
That sounds far better and more true to me than property.
But try to tell that to the "content mafia".
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The xf86-video-nv driver is described as "open source", and maybe that
is true, but I think it isn't free software. If the "source code" is
obfuscated, then it isn't real source code. It appears that the real
source code for this program is not available, which means it's not
free software. Its discontinuation is no loss.
To say that nvidia' motive is to "protect their intellectual property"
is basically vacuous, because "intellectual property" is so vague that
it doesn't mean anything, so it lends itself only to confusion. If
you want to make a clear statement, that's always easier if you avoid
that term. (See http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/not-ipr.html.)
Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by QaridariumXreal its the only one and thats only a stubit Quake3 port
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Sure I want OpenGL 4.0 in games... it provides stuff to work with which is great
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