Follow-up video to https://lemmy.world/post/32690521


Spoiler alert: the main reason he says the experience “hasn’t been great” is because shortly before posting the video his Linux install mysteriously broke and he had no idea why. Therefore, he recommended dual-booting Windows just in case.

Cue sea of comments explaining that the reason for the error he was getting was that Windows screwed up his bootloader (i.e. the problem was caused by dual-booting to begin with, LOL).

  • MangoPenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    4 days ago

    Did he use mesa or amdgpu? RADV or proprietary?

    I gotta admit I don’t understand why the best option isn’t used by default? Like when I go to download drivers off AMD/Nvidias websites there’s just one option to pick for gaming, I don’t have multiple options I need to research.

    • seralth@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      To be fair windows use to be this way too. You had the driver’s from the manufacturer and then third party drivers. Was a big thing in the ati days.

      And even in Linux you in the most strict of sense do only have 1 option for drivers if your using the manufacturers provided drivers.

      The other option is “not supported” by the manufacturer. They work but frankly the only people who care are the paranoid people who take foss to a frankly unreasonable extreme.

      For Nvidia you basically have the same experience on windows as Linux. You have to go get the driver’s from them, and the default that comes with your OS. The windows generic or the open source for Linux. Work, but it’s better to install the full driver.

      For amd you just kinda default to the best on any sane distro so it’s a non issue for Linux. Or for windows you just go install from manufacturer it doesn’t come with your OS.