"We can't fix it, it's AMD:s responsibility to fix their driver, and
they are aware of it.. The same happened during 8.10 cycle, and they
released an unofficial driver just for ubuntu a week before release or
so."

I find this attitude counterproductive and naive.

Not being a developer myself, I can't claim to have pushed the Linux
movement forward beyond having reported a few dozen bugs on one forum or
another, but isn't an issue like this larger than just one development
team?

Of course AMD does need to update their drivers as kernels and x-window
servers evolve, but don't the kernel and x-window development teams also
have a responsibility to work toward more compatible products?

At the very least this issue is divided two ways: between the AMD
development team and the X-Org development team.  As I see it, the X-Org
team is responsible for developing a more flexible, stable, and
compatible server while the AMD team is responsible for making a more
universal driver.

It's not productive to say we should "just wait" for one team to work it out, 
especially one with no obligation to comply.
The AMD team has been great about keeping up with evolving distros, but keep in 
mind those guys are actually paid for the work which they distribute for free, 
so the decision to update probably comes from higher-ups who may not see the 
problem as the driver they've been pouring money into, but the X-Org server 
which has broken compatibility with it.
The X-Org team, as volunteers, have no obligation to consider proprietary 
software support in their plans, but at least a few developers do make patches 
to supplement the main tree for these issues. Why? Lots of reasons, but the 
most important being: it is necessary and it is good for development.  By 
fixing up the server to be compatible with another driver, proprietary or 
otherwise, the server becomes a better product.

Also, while I do sincerely hope that the open-source ATI driver will one
day offer all the features of the hardware it's designed for, it does
not and will not for quite a while yet. From the average user point of
view, not the open-source freedom fighter, this driver is a severe
downgrade and regression from the proprietary; from the Aunt Tillie
point of view, "It don't work." and both are reason enough for many
people to give up on the distro entirely, stop testing, stop reporting
bugs, and switch to some proprietary operating system that gives them
what they want even though it costs much more. That's bad for
development and that's bad for Linux, not only Ubuntu.

tl;dr: Doing nothing is never the answer. Dev teams should work toward
mutual rather than independent growth for the good of Linux.


Also, regarding the bug: Has anyone had experience compiling their own X-Org 
server and using the proprietary driver? Is it possible for the X-Org server 
from Intrepid be forward-ported to Jaunty in the interim? It looks like more 
data on where exactly this breaks down must be found if the X-Org developers 
are to come up with a patch OR the AMD developers are going to rework their 
driver.

-- 
MASTER: fglrx does not support xserver 1.6
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/313027
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.

-- 
ubuntu-bugs mailing list
ubuntu-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs

Reply via email to