Comment by GCUMstlyHarmls

Comment by GCUMstlyHarmls 8 hours ago

5 replies

For what little an internet strangers comment is worth, I had similar issues and they disappeared when I swapped from Nvidia to AMD at the start of this year. Nvidia's drivers have had some kind of push since then but they have always been sort of wonky.

mirzap 8 hours ago

This is interesting to hear. I bought Nvidia because I thought they had better drivers and have a lot of support for AI and stuff, but now, in retrospect, this seems like a bad idea.

  • PurestGuava 8 hours ago

    For AI, NVidia does have better tech, but on Linux at least the driver situation with AMD is infinitely better.

    • mirzap 8 hours ago

      Oh, this was a great thread. I just investigated a bit which drivers I use, gpu.. And it turns out my arch was using built-in GPU (how?)

      glxinfo | grep "OpenGL renderer" OpenGL renderer string: AMD Radeon Graphics (radeonsi, raphael_mendocino, LLVM 20.1.8, DRM 3.64, 6.16.0-arch2-1)

      I've added a few env parameters Claude suggested in ~/.config/hypr/hyprland.conf, and now it shows: OpenGL renderer string: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 Ti/PCIe/SSE2

      Will give it a try few days, to see how it behaves.

      • likeclockwork 5 hours ago

        Wow. Your original comment reads very differently now.

        • mbreese an hour ago

          It also inadvertently proves their point. The strength of Apple hardware is the OS integration. This level of integration and polish is only possible because of the limited components they have to support. Even if you have powerful components on the PC side (Windows or Linux), you're at the mercy of a few different vendors and how well they support the hardware. And even if you get supported components, it's possible to get yourself into situations where your configuration is sub-optimal.

          Versus a Mac where you can just start it and get working. It's possible with PC hardware, but it takes more work for the customer (or vendor).