KennyR wrote:
Good if you define "good" as being "incompatible and buggy as hell", that is.
Not in my experience, that's for sure. As far as I'm concerned, they work every time, except maybe with the very latest bleeding edge kernels.
There are any number of ways to install these drivers. You can download pre-packaged binaries for your distro, or you can use the driver package directly from nVidia. If it finds an unsupported kernel, it can recompile the kernel for you with the module support needed.
"incompatible and buggy as hell" is sheer FUD in my experience. I haven't found anything it caused crashes with, and I've always been able to install the drivers on my system.
The complaints of Linux users about these drivers are constant.
So are complaints about all sorts of things, not least the ATI drivers and even Linux not being exactly like Windows.
Change kernel, you have to wait for update.
Not always. See above.
Choose any CPU but x86, too bad.
Well, if you do choose anything except x86 for running Linux, you need your head examining anyway. :-P
This goes totally against the Linux mindset.
Some of the Linux mindset. Not everyone who uses Linux believes everything and anything
must be open source or else it is unacceptable.
Binary only support from nVidia is far better than no support at all from nVidia. It's better no support at all from ATI, that for sure (And no, ATI do
not disclose proper information for people to write drivers with. That's why the ATI drivers are reverse-engineered rather than written from specs.)
Anyway, anything to do with open source is totally against the Amiga mindset, so what's your point? :-P
And your implying that if one doesn't use these big companies for a computing solution then the result must be crap by default is equally laughable.
Wha? I never said anything of the sort. You said nVidia were rubbish and used some made up FUD to justify your stance, and I just pointed out that you weren't telling the truth. That's all there is to it.
You are trapped in this world where only the cutting edge is any good,
I never said that. On the other hand, nine times out of ten "cutting edge" is better than "almost obsolete". "Almost obsolete" may still have plenty of merit, but I wouldn't advise anyone to pay more for it than they would have to for "cutting edge". Get it?
which is really not better than some who believe anything x86 is inherently evil just by existing. Or is it that you simply believe that supporting any hardware other than that you currently own is a waste of time?
No, I don't believe that. What I believe is that all hardware should be judged by the same set of criteria, and should be compared directly against the competitions. I do NOT believe anyone should pay more for something - or support it - for no other reason except that it is not mainstream.
YES! It was! Hardware designs for the A1 were being processed years before a single line of code were being written for OS4. How have you missed that?
And then, when it was decided that the Escena A1 was vapor, and Eyetech offered the TeronCX (the board that mostly closely matched what Escena A1 would have been), OS4 was still only just a bare skeleton. So I'm not wrong, it's just you who who seem to be rather ill-informed. Which is surprising considering how long you've been hanging around the forums, even if it is only to push one subject always only.
A1 was meant for OS4, and isn't priced or supported or publicised for anything else. Who'd even pay Amiga Inc.'s brand tax for a board that wasn't intended to run OS4?
The A1 exists because Eyetech need it. NOT because Amiga Inc or Hyperion or anyone else needed special hardware for AOS4. That's the point I'm making.
I don't see the difference with the Peg anyway. The Peg exists because "modern" hardware was needed for MOS. No one in their right mind really believes people will buy millions of Pegs to run Linux or BSD on them.
Oh, really. The difference is that one will be totally unstable and lose data, the other that it will be inefficient. How is that insignificant? Don't mix semantics with practicalities, Bill.
I would reply by advising you not to mix platform advocacy with the truth, because they rarely go together. I have yet to see tests done under objective laboratory conditions that prove anything one way or another. As far as I know, both the Peg and the A1 have unresolved (or at least unexplained) issues.