Linux gamer, retired aviator, profanity enthusiast

  • 4 Posts
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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 20th, 2023

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  • A couple generations back, Nvidia was the obvious choice and AMD just couldn’t compete. Nvidia had real-time ray tracing, AMD didn’t, Nvidia’s hardware video encoding was great, AMD’s sucked, Nvidia had CUDA, AMD pretty much didn’t, Nvidia had their DLSS frame gen technology, AMD either didn’t or it wasn’t very good.

    Well, in most of those places, AMD has caught up, and they offer more VRAM in their lower tier products, at better prices.

    Oh, and I’ve been hearing through the grapevine that Nvidia is dropping the ball with drivers. That used to be AMD’s bag, but AMD’s drivers are more solid these days.

    Oh, and Nvidia’s weird new power socket keeps catching on fire. I’ve got a 7900GRE that attaches with two good old 8-pin PCIe connectors that offer a distinct lack of combustion.





  • Yeah I owned the Soundblaster already though. Along with the entire PC it was in. Which still works.

    Side story, that old Dell XPS is a full tower, as far as I can tell it’s ATX compliant, it’s got the airflow of the average coffin, but unplug the Win 7 hard drive, plug in a new SSD with Mint, and runs like a new PC. I’ve been using it for its optical drives. It’s got a bunch of legacy features that are nice to have around, like a PCI slot, external SATA, firewire etc. so it’s a box I can run modern Linux on and still have access to the obsolete tech scattered around the world. And I got a sound card out of it.