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Graphics Linux

NVIDIA Releases Optimus Linux Driver With New Features 123

An anonymous reader writes "Nearly one year after Linux creator Linux Torvalds publicly bashed NVIDIA and several years after their multi-GPU mobile technology premiered, the graphics vendor has finally delivered an Optimus-supported Linux driver. NVIDIA released the 319.12 Beta Linux driver that brings support for 'RandR 1.4 GPU provider objects' that basically allows for Optimus-like functionality when using the latest X Server, Linux kernel, and XRandR. The 319.12 beta also has many other features including better UEFI support, installer improvements, new pages on their settings panel, and new GPU support."
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NVIDIA Releases Optimus Linux Driver With New Features

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  • by epyT-R ( 613989 ) on Tuesday April 09, 2013 @08:37PM (#43407899)

    Because, unlike ATI/AMD, their driver works by and large? If you only play AAA titles released around the time of the driver version you're using, amd cards work alright...usually. Try doing anything else with the card (autodesk/adobe/video playback accel/demoscene/older games/newer games) and prepare yourself for the glitch gremlin.

    I'm not saying that nvidia drivers are perfect. They're not, but they're a lot better than AMD.

  • by tepples ( 727027 ) <tepples@gmai l . com> on Tuesday April 09, 2013 @08:57PM (#43408027) Homepage Journal

    it has nothing to do with gaming performance.

    Of course it has to do with gaming performance. If you can't switch between the IGP and a discrete GPU without a reboot, then the launch and shutdown time for any high-performance 3D game includes a reboot to GPU mode, then a reboot to integrated graphics to save battery.

  • by thesupraman ( 179040 ) on Tuesday April 09, 2013 @09:01PM (#43408057)

    Quite Agree.

    Lets also not forget that the linux kernel (and other projects) have done their share of jerking NVidia around also, in the name of forcing them to work in the way the OSS people want, rather than in the way NVidia is willing to (they make/sell the cards after all).

    It pretty much looks to me that NVidia have been waiting for X Server support for the features, and can now support it since that has arrived.

  • by Sycraft-fu ( 314770 ) on Wednesday April 10, 2013 @01:37AM (#43409365)

    nVidia has reasons for doing things the way they do. Yes, one of them is probably "because we don't want AMD grabbing our work," However there is some validity to that in that it is expensive to have a team of highly qualified people to do your development.

    However that aside, there are licensing issues that keep their drivers closed, and there may be good reasons to want to use that code rather than try to re-implement it. Likewise there may be reasons to do their own thing and bypass some of the standard way of interfacing.

    nVidia produces Linux drivers that work. They support the latest OpenGL features the hardware can handle, they are fast, and they are stable. That's pretty damn useful. So they are doing something right in their development. People should consider that, rather than just assuming that nVidia could easily deliver everything the same, but just in a format that makes OSS heads happy.

    Also consider that maybe working with someone is an easier way to get at least some of what you want than fighting with them.

  • by Electricity Likes Me ( 1098643 ) on Wednesday April 10, 2013 @02:53AM (#43409707)

    They're a hardware company. I have no problem with them running custom firmwares or whatever *on the hardware* but a closed-source software driver stack is just absurd. I'd much rather we move to a model where the drivers were always OSS, even if it meant we needed more firmware running on the GPU itself since it'd be a return to having standard interfaces and it would mean everyone would get the benefits of improvements in the driver stack, rather then just the favored operating system.

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