On 13-08-30 09:00 AM, [email protected] wrote:
How could broken hardware be ok when using another OS? If the hardware
>does work with another OS, than the hardware isn't broken.
>
The key words would be other OS. Nvidia supports Windows and other commercial OSs like OSx but does not play nice with the developers of Linux, who mostly work for free and just want to help out. Picture them with the hat in hand waiting at the gargantuan doors, monolith type saying "please sir may I have the open code?" No response.

Another one that was difficult was Soundblaster/Audigy.   Same drill.

There are a few hardware manufacturers that are *dimly ***aware of Linux or are outright haters of Open source because they fail to see any money in it. Its their fail, because Canonical and other companies seem to be doing okay.

I used 'Monolithic' because there are huge companies that refuse to acknowledge or work with Linux. But call it Android and put them into the cell phone market and their ears perk up. Linux for the desktop will probably benefit but its like visiting your country cousin and finding out five years after you they get some digital cable. Heck were I am we just got fibre, a village of 700. We danced on the roofs.

Linux has come a long way, but the plug and play idiom that was very popular with Win XP onwards "It just works!" isn't as true with Linux, particularly if your like my son, who can quote the specs on his graphics card 'because all gamers can'.

For Ubuntustudio this does have an effect if your doing photography, or if your creating hi-resolution graphics. You just have to research your card and its a good bet to stay away from NVidia and find something more compatible.

Unless you have an all in one like I do, the good news is you probably have a slot to put it in after your research. Find a graphics community or gamer community and find out what they have done. They may have discovered a patch for your card.

Five years ago, the card probably wouldn't have worked at all. You could just wait, as the solution is slower in coming for Linux.

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