dec05eba
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jul 27, 2022
I dont get it, what type of issues did people have? I used nvidia on linux from 2012 to 2023 and it was working well even back then. It was fine as long as you didn't use wayland meme (or a laptop with switchable graphics with an nvidia gpu). I have an amd gpu right now (rx 7800xt) and even my cursor lags when I move it around and my system randomly freezes with a gpu driver bug or the system crashes (all which have been reported as amd issues for years). Most of these amd issues are related to terrible gpu power management/scheduling design in amd gpus.Nvidia's Linux driver used to be absolute garbage for anything but CUDA (since a lot of Linux+Nvidia use at the time really was just servers that used CUDA as an accelerator). AMD's Linux driver on the other hand worked relatively smoothly, and was generally preinstalled as part of the kernel.
Nvidia's current Linux driver is fine. It's not usually preinstalled, because it's licensed differently, but it now uses the same open interfaces the AMD driver does, so it works just as well (and arguably better in some cases, since Nvidia does generally put more polish into their drivers than AMD). Since it can be a bit of a hassle running CUDA or pytorch on AMD, and Nvidia cards perform so much better in general, and DLSS is so much better than FSR, I've switched to recommending Nvidia on Linux and Windows both. Two years ago I was very strongly in favour of AMD-only on Linux, but that's changed.
AV1 video encoding on amd gpus even has a hardware issue that cant be fixed in the gpu driver (it adds black bars at the bottom/side depending on the video resolution).
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