Louis E Garcia II wrote: > I'm looking at the Dell XPS Studio with the new intel i7 chip. Anyone > have experience with this new chipset with fedora? Not personally, but I know a lot of people (including Linus, and the major server manufacturers) have been running Linux on this processor for quite a while. Incidentally, the i7 is a processor¹, not a chipset². The chipset in this computer is the Intel X58 chipset, which is what practically everyone will have been using. As a general rule, you’re much more likely to have problems with chipsets than processors: new chipsets usually need new drivers (which may be buggy or not exist), whereas processors are normally expected to be 100% backwards-compatible with their predecessors. In this case, you should be fine, since Intel is pretty good these days at ensuring Linux just works on most of their hardware, Linux is a target market for the hardware, and the chipsets just aren’t doing anything particularly new that needs software support. And there again, you’re much more likely to have problems with dodgy BIOSes that are only tested with Windows than with chipsets. For that, you really need to check with someone who’s got a recent Dell. You may want to ask again, specifically mentioning the graphics chip you’re planning on getting. It looks like you have a choice of the ATI Radeon HD 3450 or the 4850. man radeon on F10 mentions the 3450, but not the 4850. Hope this helps, James. ¹ Something that actually does the calculations. ² Something that helps drive data around the computer, and (usually) has a bunch of other integrated functions. -- E-mail: james@ | They say that every cloud has a silver lining, which must aprilcottage.co.uk | be a bit alarming for airline pilots... | -- “I’m Sorry, I Haven’t A Clue”, BBC Radio 4 -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines