▲ | messe 3 days ago | |||||||
> Using NVIDIA proprietary Ah, I haven't tried it on NVIDIA drivers in a while. I'm doing a reinstall on my gaming PC soon, so I'll give it a shot then. I've been using it on Intel and AMD systems, and haven't had issues. But you know, they actually have drivers that are designed for the modern linux graphics stack. > P.s. I also tried XFCE and Enlightenment.. and those are not any better (not that claim to be anything but pre-alpha). So... maybe the NVIDIA drivers then? And not KDE Plasma? > The Linux graphics stack just lags behind decade after decade... never catches up... Come on, you can't really blame NVIDIA's dogshit drivers that refuse to integrate into the rest of the stack on the KDE devs. | ||||||||
▲ | samiv 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
No, what I mean with XFCE and Englightenment is that they admit being alpha. Yeah, well the reality is that NVIDIA drivers are the drivers one wants to use on NVIDIA hardware (which many of us have. And somehow they work fine on X11. It's always nice to blame the driver vendor, but what has the Linux community the kernel team, the graphics team done to promote Linux and make it simple to write correct performant drivers for the platform? How many graphics memory allocations are there? How many buffer sharing APIs, are the kernel driver interfaces stable? | ||||||||
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