CalcProgrammer1

joined 1 year ago
[–] CalcProgrammer1@lemmy.today 3 points 9 hours ago

Oh, you have NVIDIA 10 series, the worst generation of NVIDIA card. Too old to support GSP, too new for nouveau reclocking, abandoned by NVIDIA's current drivers and stuck in boot clock hell due to signed firmware. Unfortunately the 10 series cards are just going to suck on Linux and that situation won't improve unless a miracle happens. NVIDIA's usefulness on modern Linux begins with the 20 series and GSP firmware. I had a 1080Ti, it was not a good experience.

[–] CalcProgrammer1@lemmy.today 1 points 9 hours ago

I'm not sure on Debian, as Debian tends to sit on old releases of stuff for a long time. On Arch with KDE Plasma Wayland or GNOME Wayland, I just install nvidia-open-dkms and let it do its thing. Vulkan automatically uses the NVIDIA RTX 3070 in my Razer Blade 14 2021, no weird hacks or command line arguments required. Also, NVK is also quite usable, so I have set up rEFInd configs to boot with either NVIDIA driver loaded or nouveau. NVIDIA Settings is an antiquated tool and pretty useless if you're using Wayland.

[–] CalcProgrammer1@lemmy.today 1 points 10 hours ago (4 children)

That setup is working fairly well these days though, NVIDIA Optimus configurations have been doing fine for at least a year now. Granted, my laptop is AMD + NVIDIA not Intel, but I don't think that matters.

[–] CalcProgrammer1@lemmy.today 12 points 1 month ago

My only takeaway that could be seen as good news is that they at least expect consumers to have access to local computing power strong enough to run local AI, and that computing power is very likely in the form of GPUs that can also be used for PC gaming. Hopefully this means there's still some focus on consumer GPUs somewhere out there rather than just selling them all to OpenAI.