Thats 3D. For good 3D drivers, you'll have to go with the closed source drivers if you're going to buy either NVidia or ATI. The open source drivers for those card, performance wise - is slow.
Thanks, Hetz On 5/8/07, Yehoshua (shay) O'Hayon Suchar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Blender, for example. - original message - Subject: Re: Graphic card From: "Hetz Ben Hamo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: 08/05/2007 11:42 It really depends.. what do you mean "Graphica design"? CAD? Video Editing? Photo Editing? Animation? Thanks, Hetz On 5/8/07, Yehoshua (shay) O'Hayon Suchar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hello list. > > > I'm interested on buying a graphic card for graphical design on Linux > specifically, and I would like to know if there is any Linux friendly > graphic card that might work out of the box on a Linux system > (specifically Debian) and that might work without proprietary drivers. > > > Any ideas? > > > thanks in advance, > > shay > > > ================================================================= > To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with > the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command > echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > -- Skepticism is the lazy person's default position. Visit my blog (hebrew) for things that (sometimes) matter: http://wp.dad-answers.com
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