• tekato@lemmy.world
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      25 days ago

      They’re so done with NVIDIA they don’t even have the energy to attack them on a forum anymore

    • lengau@midwest.social
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      25 days ago

      Don’t their current beta drivers support like… 10 year old products?

      I have a lot of complaints about Nvidia (which is one of the reasons I moved away from their cards), but longevity of support hasn’t really been one of them.

        • dubyakay@lemmy.ca
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          25 days ago

          I have a gtx 670 from 12 years ago and nouveau is incredibly slow for me. I need to use the proprietary driver.

      • zurohki@aussie.zone
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        25 days ago

        Yeah, but because pricing jumped like someone set a firecracker off under it’s chair people are actually still using vintage GPUs.

        • lengau@midwest.social
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          25 days ago

          It’s not a perfect comparison, but if we go by the Steam Hardware Survey, the first item I can find on the list that’s not supported with the latest beta drivers is the GT 730, at 0.21% of users. And it’s from June 2014.

          Its passmark score is 835, which is lower than the 9 year old Intel HD 520 (867). I somehow doubt though that driver support for Vulkan/Wayland will be the major blocker.

      • LalSalaamComrade@lemmy.ml
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        25 days ago

        I’ve used a Jetson Nano, so I know enough about how “reliable” Nvidia is. Pooled in money with my college mates for my Bachelor’s final-year project to get an old one in good condition. I will never will never buying anything from Nvidia, because the software experience was dog-shit.

        Linux image was stuck on Ubuntu, 20.04, CUDA didn’t work with OpenCV of the box, I had to build it locally, which took an entire day. Enabling the repository would fuck the entire image when I try to download Python libraries, and I would have to reflash it on the SD Card. And well, could I use a different ARM image from, say Fedora IOT? Well yes, but then the CUDA drivers are no longer accessible, because those drivers were never open-sourced, making it useless for computer vision. And what if I accidentally update the kernel? Again, CUDA just stops working. They just abandon their products on their own whims.

        I also have a laptop with an Nvidia mobile GPU, and my Linux experience is so utterly terrible with it, I’ve just decided to disable my discrete GPU and use only the integrated Intel UHD driver.

  • NekuSoul@lemmy.nekusoul.de
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    25 days ago

    Surely they didn’t mention multi-monitor VRR support because the work for that is already done and just about to arrive in the next beta driver any day now, right?

    I’ve worked around the issue with an AMD iGPU, but still.

      • NekuSoul@lemmy.nekusoul.de
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        25 days ago

        You can enable it, but it just won’t work when more than a single monitor is connected to an Nvidia GPU.

        Right now the only workaround other than turning off secondary monitors while gaming is connecting all but one monitor to an iGPU, assuming you have one.

        As far as I know Nvidia has recently confirmed that they can reproduce the issue, so hopefully it’ll be fixed soon.