Originally posted by BO$$
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Nouveau Driver Remains Much Slower Than NVIDIA's Official Driver
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Originally posted by BO$$ View PostSure I can. Even better I can switch to windows and not have these problems in the first place fuck you very much! All this squabbling over open source vs proprietary gets on the nerves of both users and companies. You care more about being right than getting things done. Fuck you community!
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Originally posted by GreatEmerald View PostNope. Do remember that they dropped driver support for Windows, too. Windows 8 only supports the cards through their "vesa" equivalent driver...
Only difference is that Microsoft does not bundle the Catalyst software with the driver.
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Originally posted by BO$$ View PostNo there isn't! And you know that! Stop with the contributing bullshit as it is only a way to avoid the issue. And the issue is that they make it impossible for the proprietary drivers to work properly. They are doing it on purpose to fuck them over so maybe they'll release them as open source or give in to their demands. The problem is that they also fuck me over their fucking ideological differences that I don't care about. And no matter how much code I write for open source will change that unless I simply create my own operating system and everything. And that is not feasible.
They can make it so even with newer X versions, the proprietary driver would work. They just don't want to.
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Originally posted by Brane215 View PostWhile you only care about things being done _for_you_ . As such, you are pretty much dead weight in any community.
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Originally posted by Sonadow View PostNonsense, Windows 8 has the official driver from AMD bundled in for all Radeon cards, including the legacy ones. This has been the case since Windows 7.
Only difference is that Microsoft does not bundle the Catalyst software with the driver.
Originally posted by BO$$ View PostStop complaining. At least you have a choice. AMD dropped support for 2000/3000/4000 series and I have a 3400. So I have to use the open source radeon driver. Which has baaaad performance. It sucks so much that I cannot even have a fluid desktop let alone anything 3d game. Anything open source graphics driver sucks horribly on linux. And the more you hurl insults at either AMD or Nvidia the less proprietary support you'll get. And that hurts linux. BRING ME PROPRIETARY BLOBS!!! NOW! DON'T LISTEN TO THESE IDIOTS NVIDIA OR AMD!!!
Originally posted by BO$$ View Postglxinfo | grep OpenGL:
OpenGL vendor string: X.Org
OpenGL renderer string: Gallium 0.4 on AMD RV620
OpenGL version string: 2.1 Mesa 9.0
OpenGL shading language version string: 1.30
OpenGL extensions:
Had none of those problems using the proprietary driver to answer your question.
I have a laptop. Can't change anything in it except memory. If there was no open source drivers maybe AMD wouldn't have let go of the proprietary driver for my card. What do you mean that open source perform better? They are much worse than the proprietary blob. I could play nexuiz very well on 12.04 but on 12.10 I get around 20 fps.
Also, windows is closed source. Its full of NDAs. Opensource and closed source do not exist together easily (unless its call-girl BSD, with result = proprietary).
In order to achieve same level of integration, manufacturers should spend at least same amount of resources, which they don't do.
It would be a lot easier for proprietary to integrate, if Linux were proprietary, but that would mean every Linux developer will have to sign NDA, which is likewise impossible, as Linux chances to survive along and in case being itself proprietary OS.
So, no NDA possible, manufacturers do not target Linux for the same market(I am not speaking about community), they do not dump same amount of cash on development and ignore your opinion.
Your behavior is like swearing on David for being no match to Goliaph, while silently enoying buttseks with the later.
The open driver stack is showing 40-70% performance of the closed driver with OpenGL 3, and that only within several years of development.
So, if you don't want to support the development (instead of crying like small babies), do whats acceptable for you. Along with consequences.
And regarding this:
Originally posted by Sonadow View PostAnd I also don't need to mention the hypocrisy displayed over the whole 'open-source makes everything cross-platform compatible' nonsense. Open source everything so that nobody has unfair advantages? So why are there people who are in favour of Linux-specific extensions made to key pieces of a Linux distribution stack (systemd is a very good example) that makes it completely incompatible with the BSDs? Or even the religious war that BSD is some devil which should be condemned just because Linux holds the lion's share of the alternative operating system market? By that logic the whole world, and not just AMD and Nvidia, can simply condemn Linux to death because Windows holds a 70% market share of mainstream desktop operating systems. People tout open systems and cross platform compatibility while trying to defend all actions that undermine BSD compatibility when major changes are made to the Linux software stack with claims that BSD is not relevant anymore because Linux's market share dwarves it (while conveniently forgetting that Windows crushes Linux and OS X combined in the desktop OS front). Hypocrisy at its finest, no?
If you are a developer - you are free to make your own.
Lennard clearly stated that he has no intention to pull the train of legacy/compatible systems along.
This is his way to concentrate development time to make Linux much more competitive to ... windows (yes) and apple. Was that your problem? Then who is hypocrite?
When the technology is ripe enough, any system can port the stabilized changes back, because its opensource and nobody looses. Unlike the proprietary trash you seem to enjoy, which only works well on one OS.
Originally posted by Sonadow View PostAny operating system that requires its users to be programmers and testers just to get their hardware workable has missed the point of what an operating system is supposed to be.Last edited by crazycheese; 06 January 2013, 10:25 PM.
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Originally posted by Sonadow View PostAny operating system that requires its users to be programmers and testers just to get their hardware workable has missed the point of what an operating system is supposed to be.
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Originally posted by Sonadow View PostAny operating system that requires its users to be programmers and testers just to get their hardware workable has missed the point of what an operating system is supposed to be.
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Originally posted by BO$$ View PostI am not necessarely saying that there is a conspiracy but the fact is that they break compatibility every month. And my question is why the hell do they make lives harder for driver manufacturers?
Just as manufacturers respond to market forces Xorg, Wayland etc are responging to free forces of open source. Free programs tend to appaer on places where they are needed and where conditions are favorable. Limiting one of their most fundamental principle ( freedom of change) would mean killing the project.
Also, closed drivers show now and again that even if they can be useful solution for some purposes, they fail miserably across the board as one-size-fits-all solution.
Since manufacturers can not predict all possible usefull roles for their product ( and even if they could , they don't care to) so they opt for least common denominator.
Anyone outside that is basically screwed.
This is why wee need that freedom. Even if we don't want to use particualr open source product, data and source on which is based enable us to roll our own...
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Originally posted by Brane215 View PostLimiting one of their most fundamental principle ( freedom of change) would mean killing the project.
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