• Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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    31 minutes ago

    That’s the thing with AMD drivers, they’re the damn near perfect software. Doing lots of stuff yet you’d never know it’s there. It stays nicely out of the user’s way, you don’t even have to think about installing them and shit just works

    Then there are the Nvidia drivers

  • Jankatarch@lemmy.world
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    43 minutes ago

    On one hand, setting up complicated stuff is a challenge and also fun.

    On the other hand, I don’t wanna pay a company doing propreitery stuff.

    On the other feet, prices are increasing due to chatbot girlfriend arms race between richest dudes on earth; are GPUs really even worth it anymore?

  • TheMightyCat@ani.social
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    2 hours ago

    I’m running wayland with nvidia-open and nvidia-utils packages, and have never encountered any driver issues in both graphics and compute.

    • B-TR3E@feddit.org
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      37 minutes ago

      You mean all three apps that support waylamd are working? Wow. At the same time?

    • CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      The only time I’ve ever really had issues with Nvidia drivers is when installing the meta package for CUDA (because it tends to include a previous version of the driver, which causes install/uninstall havok), or with laptops and hybrid graphics.

      But the laptop issue is almost completely gone with newer distros like Bazzite.

      • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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        57 minutes ago

        because it tends to include a previous version of the driver, which causes install/uninstall havok

        To be fair, this is a packaging/distro problem, as CUDA should always work (and be kept in sync with) the newest graphics driver.

        ROCM and OpenVINO (AMD and Intel) are even more of a pain, actually.

  • palordrolap@fedia.io
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    3 hours ago

    In LMDE4, 5 and 6, I pretty much had to install the OEM NVIDIA driver because the open source Nouveau driver didn’t quite cut it, but for AMD, the stock driver that comes with LMDE7 has worked fine for my purposes so far.

    I may change my tune if I try to run a more modern game*, but that will likely put me back in Frankendebian territory which caused me problems under LMDE6. (As you might surmise, I upgraded to new hardware and tried to do things as I’d always done them when LMDE6 was current.)

    * Minecraft notwithstanding, because it both is and isn’t modern. That can get above 1000 FPS if I don’t limit it.

  • OwOarchist@pawb.social
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    5 hours ago

    When you want to do GPU processing for AI, crypto, video editing, etc, though, this gets reversed.

    Getting Cuda working on Linux with an nvidia card is relatively painless. Just a few well-documented commands, worked on the first try.

    I could never get AMD’s equivalent to work on Linux, though, and it led me down a horrible rabbit-hole of trying a dozen different driver versions from a dozen different places, all with their own unique and quirky ways of installing… And it still never did work.

    • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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      53 minutes ago

      Thats just poor distro support, kind of like CUDA in the past… ROCM should “just work” if it’s shipped right. But it’s not really a priority with maintainers.

      Now, if you’re trying to run CUDA stuff with ROCM, that’s a whole different story. The bast majority of GPU software has extremely poor ROCM support compared to CUDA, and some of this is definitely from AMD footgunning.

    • juipeltje@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      For me it was deadsimple once i tried setting it up with nix, granted you need to learn a little about nix so maybe that cancels it out a bit lol.

    • Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de
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      5 hours ago

      For me cuda was painful. I did the well documented commands, rebooted and had no output on my laptop screen anymore. Probably a complication due to Optimus, but still…

    • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      I need an intel driver to turn the fucking useless onboard graphics off. for debian. any tips?

    • Redjard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 hours ago

      3 years ago this was true. Not sure if nvidia works properly with wayland even now, though at least the trend is different now

      • Kristell@herbicide.fallcounty.omg.lol
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        44 minutes ago

        From what I saw from my old room mate, it worked fine as of about 6 months ago. They got lower performance than on Windows, but still ran most games over 155fps (their monitor’s refresh rate) without any notable bugs. They had one of the cards that was like $2k new a year or two ago, idr the number, I think 4090?

      • Petter1@discuss.tchncs.de
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        5 hours ago

        It has no issues, NVIDIA just works these days (if you use a distro where you can choose to use proprietary drivers for it during installation)

        • merc@sh.itjust.works
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          57 minutes ago

          Are there distros where you can’t do that? I mean, maybe Debian?

          I have had only a few issues with nVidia on Linux for a few years. But, I am using an old card. I’d like to live in the nice sunny castle, not the scary one with bad weather. But, at least I have mostly working shelter while I play my games.

        • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          4 hours ago

          I mean yeah, but that’s a little like saying “computers all have WiFi capabilities these days, as long as you only buy motherboards with built in WiFi.” It’s a pretty large limitation to place on the user’s choice. Especially when Linux users like to meme about certain distros being better or worse.

          • Redjard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            3 hours ago

            It used to be that there was no option at all, on any distro. You’d have the broken proprietary drivers, or the open source reverse engineered one with half the performance and unreliability in specialty features.

            Since then Nvidia has shifted focus to get their drivers working properly, and there were also changes making them more open source, tho I’m not sure that’d mean the “proprietary driver” will go full foss at some point.

            If op is to be believed, the proprietsry driver is already a lot more stable, so it’s now a software licensing issue not an unfixable technical issue.

          • Petter1@discuss.tchncs.de
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            2 hours ago

            Well, no, not at all. Nvida works on wayland on any distro, but it just works on some distros.

            It just works means no user config required.

    • merc@sh.itjust.works
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      60 minutes ago

      Considering their stock price has grown by 27,557% in those 10 years, I don’t think too many people at the company are concerned with their “falling”

      https://www.financecharts.com/stocks/NVDA/performance/total-return

      It sucks that they abandoned us, and it’s awful that they’re a huge part of the AI bubble,. But, this is like an artist who used to play on Tuesday evenings at your local live music venues “selling out” and now playing stadiums.

  • katy ✨@piefed.blahaj.zone
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    6 hours ago

    i wish i could go to an amd card but i just upgraded my video card (geforce rtx 4060 ti) like 3 months before i decided to move to linux :(

    • Petter1@discuss.tchncs.de
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      2 hours ago

      Jo, no problem! Just use the proprietary drivers and vulcan, cuda etc. Just works

      Especially with a recent card, like a 4060. Problematic are only the cards which are considered legacy by nvidia (I think older than the GTX 900 series), because they do not update their drivers for newer kernels. In these cases resorting to nouveau (in-kernel driver for nvidia cards) is your best bet, but you will not use the card’s full potential.

      Edit: One can of course use proprietary drivers with legacy cards if you use a distro in a legacy kernel. But having old kernel then comes with less compatibility to other devices, as backports generally take their time.

    • Zorsith@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      5 hours ago

      I feel ya. I built pure AMD explicitly for linux gaming early last year… and then proceeded to not install linux for like 6 months 😅 had a 2080 ti for years before that

    • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      I did the same (different card but similar situation) and I was able to sell my Nvidia card for similar to what I paid for it. Not sure if that would be the case these days though.

  • utjebe@reddthat.com
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    4 hours ago

    I recall having fairly trouble free run with GF 1060 on Fedora on a desktop.

    However having an AMD cpu and nvidia dgpu in a laptop is a fuckin’ nightmare. Probably only Broadcom and Mediatek are more random when it comes to drivers. Good thing is that you can plop out a wifi card and get an Intel one for €20.

    Edit: I also run Amd 6800 and 9070 in 2 desktops and that just work. I never had to care for drivers.

    • notthebees@reddthat.com
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      4 hours ago

      Unless if you have the random HP laptop where no Intel card works.

      (I have this laptop, there’s 2 ax200s that HP ships, one with Intel one with amd. No it’s not CNVIO)

      • utjebe@reddthat.com
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        3 hours ago

        I had that on some lenovo many many years ago… also lovely.

        Luckily an EliteBook I got maybe 2 years ago allowed me to fix a bug in a wifi driver that mediatek introduced. There were workarounds, but fuck that. Ax200 fixed it.