On Fri, 15 Oct 2010 09:50:12 -0700 James McKenzie wrote: > On 10/14/10 1:52 AM, Valent Turkovic wrote: > > This post has raised some heat in blog comments and also in Fedora > > mailing list discussion. > Discussing OpenSource versus Proprietary always brings heat. Folks have > to remember thought, that the OpenSource drivers do not support features > and products that the proprietary drivers do, due to the 'hiding' of > information by Vendors and the time it takes to black box test a > particular feature. That is a fact of life and we all need to keep that > in mind when someone asks: > > "Open or closed source"? > > Well what video card do you have and what do you plan to do with it? > > Older model, 2D and simple 3D: Open Source, almost always. > Newer model (not on the OSS driver supported list) or complex 3D. > Proprietary, mainly. As the OSS driver picks up more features AND the > video card becomes 'older' then the OSS driver should be selected over > proprietary. > > Simple answer, complex solution as information has to be gathered and > suggestions should be made with caveats "This works for me" or "Your > Mileage May Vary". > > No need to argue here. This is about as cut and dried as it can be > made. Some folks swear by Open Source, others at it. Some swear by > nVidia/Catalyst/Intel, others at it. Nobody is ever going to be > completely satisfied by someone else's solution if they are not doing > EXACTLY the same things. > > James McKenzie A voice of reason on this issue. Amazing. :-) As for me, on every new Fedora release I install (currently running F13) I try the latest open source driver first. Then I install the NVidia driver (from the rpmfusion-nonfree repo). The latter has not yet failed to be snapper when running the KDE Desktop Effects than the former. That's on my desktop machines. I also use very advanced display technology (it's my research) which the open source driver will probably _never_ drive. (For example I'm running a $10,000 NVidia Quadro Plex subsystem on one machine with multiple gen-locked and frame-locked monitors.) As for the OP's question of what driver: [root ~]# rpm -qa | fgrep -i nvid nvidia-settings-1.0-6.fc13.x86_64 nvidia-xconfig-1.0-4.fc13.x86_64 akmod-nvidia-256.53-1.fc13.x86_64 xorg-x11-drv-nvidia-libs-256.53-2.fc13.x86_64 xorg-x11-drv-nvidia-256.53-2.fc13.x86_64 kmod-nvidia-2.6.34.7-56.fc13.x86_64-256.53-1.fc13.4.x86_64 all installed via "yum". Note the "akmod". It ensures (as I understand it) that a new "kmod-nvidia" gets automagically compiled during the boot process whenever I update to a new kernel. I've been using the rpmfusion stuff (and Livna) stuff for years w/o any problems to speak of. (NB: Others have had problems with akmod and don't use it. YMMV). The one time I downloaded a binary driver directly from nvidia (about 1 year ago) for some experiements, the package borked the module installation process so at boot time I had to always "rmmod" and the "modprobe" drivers. That's my experience. Dean ========= Dean S. Messing Senior. Scientist Display Algorithms and Visual Optimization Laboratory Sharp Laboratories of America -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines