New ATI Driver
macariov at gmail.com
macariov at gmail.com
Fri Jul 20 20:58:15 UTC 2007
I just went by one of those places where big companies get rid of the hardware they do not use any more. I happened to get there at agood time. A big auditing and accounting company had just thown some pcs after they finished one of their contracts. For 125 usd I got an AMD 64 3400 with ATI integrated. No memory, no HD. Went to compusa and got a 250 gb hdd and 2 gb ram for 175. I will be testing ubuntu 7.10 and the. ATI driver tomorrow. Woohoo!
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-----Original Message-----
From: "Dotan Cohen" <dotancohen at gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 20 Jul 2007 20:20:41
To:"Kubuntu Help and User Discussions" <kubuntu-users at lists.ubuntu.com>
Subject: Re: New ATI Driver
On 20/07/07, manchicken <manchicken at notsosoft.net> wrote:
> On Friday 20 July 2007 06:18:28 Dotan Cohen wrote:
> [snip]
> > As right as you are, _any_ improvements in official Linux support from
> > major manufacturers such as ATI/AMD is a step in the right direction.
> > It will set precedent to the smaller manufacturers.
>
> Except that it's not the smaller manufacturers that are a problem. It is
> particularly the large manufacturers that are the problem. They use their
> market share to marginalize and exclude those who are contrary to their goals
> or are simply less profitable. THAT is what the problem is. It's not that
> they can't, it's that they won't, and they never will until they're in a
> situation where they have no other choice.
So make it profitable for them. Have everyone you know write to them.
I do it all the time. See:
http://dotancohen.com/eng/linux_compatibility.php
> Buying their cards and using their proprietary drivers does nothing but
> encourage this negative behavior. I fully support proprietary drivers for
> those who didn't know when they got their machine that they were going to
> have this issue. The people who do know better, however, should probably
> consider buying better so that they don't get this problem in the future and
> so that they don't encourage this behavior.
Unfortunately, I didn't know and I'm stuck with an X1400 in this Dell
Inspiron. But I write to companies that I don't even have their
hardware, to display that Linux users exist. If 1% of Linux users
wrote to one hardware company a week, do you have any idea about what
kind of a difference we could make?
> A step in the right direction would be releasing code or specs or promising
> not to sue those who reverse engineer things. This isn't a step in the right
> direction, it is merely a continuance of prior bad behavior.
Have you heard of the Linux Drive Initiative? Tell the hardware
companies about it.
Dotan Cohen
http://lyricslist.com/
http://what-is-what.com/
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