| ▲ | giancarlostoro 6 hours ago | |
I started using Linux in like 2007 but the GPU was always an issue. Then it was running games. Linux changed for me around 2013+ when I would install it on my laptops and get a heck of a performance boost. Heck those laptops still turn on to this day. Windows just bloats all hardware. | ||
| ▲ | 0x1ch 5 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
Been on / off Linux for the desktop since about the same time. Recurring theme across my AMD and NVIDIA gpus. Support has always sucked! Over the years it felt like a game of whack a mole finding the right combination of driver versions, open or closed source. R9 390 owners back in the day will understand... Fast forward to now, the same problems keep occurring albeit better off then they were. | ||
| ▲ | a_vanderbilt 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |
It's been an unfortunate re-occurring issue for me as well. Recent hardware is much better about this, and I too have seen the performance bumps at the cost of software compatibility. I feel like if Adobe brought their CC suite to Linux I'd have no reason to ever use Windows outside the random game that _needs_ it. | ||
| ▲ | simoncion 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
> I started using Linux in like 2007 but the GPU was always an issue. Were you running Nvidia hardware? I've been running Linux since like 2000-ish, have always run ATi/AMD hardware on my desktop machines, and (aside from overheat issues brought on by the undersized replacement fan attached with bread ties to that one board) haven't had troubles. On the other hand, I don't suspend my desktop or servers to RAM or disk, so maybe that has intermittently or always been broken... I'd never know. I've only had Intel hardware in my laptops, and I can't remember ever having trouble suspending those to RAM or disk. | ||