NVIDIA Engineers On The Realities Of Linux Drivers 21
linuxquestions writes "LinuxQuestions.org recently interviewed members of the NVIDIA Linux team. The interview covers the internal use of Linux at NVIDIA, the current demand NVIDIA is seeing for Linux drivers, the biggest perceived obstacle in Linux becoming a mainstream gaming platform and the decision to maintain both an Open Source and closed source Linux driver."
Unified Driver Infrastructure (Score:5, Interesting)
This is what they cite in not open sourcing the driver--too much of the unified code is licensed by them from third parties. (Now why don't they ask their sources about a dual GPL/proprietary license?)
The followup question that this raises is: Given that the base driver code is the same across platforms, are there any particular aspects of X or Linux that reduce performance?
Re:Unified Driver Infrastructure (Score:3, Interesting)
You think this never crossed their mind?
Re:Unified Driver Infrastructure (Score:2)
Re:Unified Driver Infrastructure (Score:2)
Re:Unified Driver Infrastructure (Score:2, Informative)
http://news.zdnet.co.uk/software/0,39020381,210103 7,00.htm [zdnet.co.uk]
(QUOTE) An OEM is required to sort through a potential legal morass of licensing issues around the GPL if it wants to protect its intellectual property rights. This creates extra costs from both a development and legal perspective. An example of this risk can be taken from nVidia. An nVidia programmer, in the cou
Re:Unified Driver Infrastructure (Score:3, Insightful)
The only people that can truly comment on why the nVidia driver can or can not be released are internal to nVidia. So you have to take whatever nVidia says at face value. If they say there is licensed code in
Re:Unified Driver Infrastructure (Score:1)
"Did not want to" implies that they CAN. Can not would infer third party reasons why they cant.
SO.. YOu just didnt read it carefully enough. I know what Im talking about.
Re:Unified Driver Infrastructure (Score:3, Insightful)
"All title and copyrights in and to the SOFTWARE
This might be standard legalese, but it certanly states that code isn't necessarily all nVidia's.
By the way, "yum update" is not a good idea on Fedora Core 2 if you have the nVidia driver installed.
Re:Unified Driver Infrastructure (Score:5, Interesting)
are there any particular aspects of X or Linux that reduce performance?
Probably more so for X11, given its age.
I'd be interested in having Someone That Really Knows tell me
Re:Unified Driver Infrastructure (Score:2)
The X.org people seem to be making good progress on updating X11 to suit modern hardware, while maintaining backward compatibility. If we threw out all our software every time the hardware changed we'd never get anywhere.
The obvious follow-up question (Score:2)
You'll get the same idiot reply out of all of them (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Unified Driver Infrastructure (Score:1)
In fact they're so awesome that I began to wonder if the previous driver releases were a bit fucked up. Still dunn