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AMD has announced their next generation driver platform, Crimson, as part of AMD’s new more agile and vertical software initiative that’s come from the reorganization into the Radeon Technologies Group.

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Introducing AMD Radeon Crimson, the new face of drivers for AMD.

Though not available today, AMD’s Radeon Software Crimson is a dramatic shift in their software design strategy. AMD has spent some time going over their Catalyst driver interface to identify problems and set out to fix them, to make a better driver interface that’s easier to digest and easier to actually work with. And it was emphasized that you won’t have to register with an email address to use it, either.

With this new driver release, AMD is looking to move away from the common criticisms of their drivers that has been near constant in the past. The Catalyst Control Center was well received when it was released, though it’s now grown into something large and unweildy. AMD’s goal, then, for Radeon Crimson is to re-brand their drivers as something new that fits with their new software initiative as well as redesign the interface into something that befits the 21st century.

Now it’s simply called Radeon Software to help emphasize the Radeon brand and to bring that recognition over to their software. They’ll also have a new naming scheme for drivers going forward. AMD’s drivers are far more stable than they had been in 2002 when the Catalyst Control Center was first released, though the association with those poorly optimized and implemented drivers still remains, hence the name change to distance the drivers from the rocky past.

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Goodbye Catalyst, hello beautiful.

The new GUI, now built entirely on QT for it’s speed and stability, is part of a a new design philosophy that’s supposed to be far more intuitive and easier to use while still providing the advanced control that power-users require. The emphasis her is obviously on the interface itself showing that they’re more than committed to addressing the issues that have been mainstay for quite some time.

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But there are plenty of visual improvements and even some other inclusions that are expected to be appeal to gamers, though. There’s a new game manager that allows per game customization in a very easy to use interface. A new overdrive menu that is more intuitive, and good to look at, that also lets you set overclocking profiles for individual games as well. The video settings are adaptive and will list only what you’re card is capable of. Eyefinity is also adaptive, and is able to give a “best guess” based on what’s plugged in and where, should you activate it.

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The overall new look is much sleeker than it has been in the past, and it does appear to at least offer a measure of intuitiveness as part of the design. Good looks do count for something, and it’s even supposed to be a much faster GUI as well. It can startup in around 9 seconds in even the worst of conditions.

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This looks like a well done feature, and one that was lacking from a first-party standpoint. NVIDIA has their GeForce Experience, which is separate, and now AMD will have their own internal game manager that can also tune your games settings, including OC profiles for individual games.

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Unfortunately only small performance improvements and stability improvements of the actual underlying driver are expected with this release. But again, this is part of AMD’s initiative to try to make their software just as powerful as their hardware. It’s easily been dismissed in the past, but now even the user interface is under scrutiny, and AMD is more than willing to fix that for us in their Crimson update. And really, this is only the beginning and while we won’t see massive performance boosts in games as a result of this, it’s a step towards bringing their driver interface to parity with NVIDIA and is a look at the future.

We won’t have drivers to test for a few weeks yet, but the interface does look very interesting. Down below we have a gallery that goes over some of the finer points you can expect to see in the new Crimson release.

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Originally written by Jeff Williams: http://wccftech.com/amd-radeon-software-crimson-driver-announced-completely-redesigned-from-the-ground-up/

By courtesy of Jeff Williams:

@BdMdesigN Of course! Thank you for asking. :)

— Jeff Williams (@wesjanson99) 5. November 2015



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Editor Note: It's not entirely clear what parts of it will come to Linux. Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: Hardware
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Donkey Nov 7, 2015
As long as the driver itself supports all or most of the features it is likely Linux will receive this update as well. After all, it would not make much sense to to have two Qt versions of their interface when they could share it between platforms. It is even possible that this version is an iteration from the Linux version of Catalyst.
ElectricPrism Nov 7, 2015

STiAT Nov 7, 2015
Quoting: DonkeyAs long as the driver itself supports all or most of the features it is likely Linux will receive this update as well. After all, it would not make much sense to to have two Qt versions of their interface when they could share it between platforms. It is even possible that this version is an iteration from the Linux version of Catalyst.

That will depend on. In NVidia driver, platform specific code is not even 20 %, which is part of the issue of keeping it proprietary.

For AMD, the developments were completely seperated, and it were two different platforms. We'll see if that will change.
burnall Nov 7, 2015
Just make the damn drivers. I dont care about their new marketing gui look.


Last edited by burnall on 7 November 2015 at 6:02 am UTC
tuubi Nov 7, 2015
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Quoting: GuestDoesn't GTK just adapt your GTK Theme.
You can make a GTK UI use whichever theme you please, regardless of the system setting.

EDIT: Probably not what you were asking, looking at the context. Sorry.


Last edited by tuubi on 7 November 2015 at 12:56 pm UTC
STiAT Nov 7, 2015
Quoting: Guest
Quoting: STiAT
Quoting: GuestBut Qt looks ugly or did it change?

That's bullshit, it's all about the theming. This one looks as if designed with QML. Anyway, if you look at standard themed GTK+ applications, they're ugly as hell ;-).
Anyway, Qt is at the moment the more professional and better (in sense of features and cross platform compatibility) toolkit compared to GTK+. Even long living GTK+ projects switched to Qt (Surface, LXDE, Unity8, Dropbox, Wireshark, VLC - to name a few prominent ones). Mostly they named the reason that cross platform in GTK+ was mostly a stepchild, especially the native look-and-feel on other platforms was just bad (and still is). Some even because they couldn't implement certain things in GTK+ without ugly workarounds. Sadly, QML Desktop elements do not yet have feature parity with Qt Widgets (as icons in dropdown menus).

The largest issues of Qt were (for a long time) the licensing issue not being LGPL, and that the libraries were pretty big, so you loaded pretty much a junk of things into memory. They changed that in Qt4 (licensing, Nokia) and Qt5 (splitting Qt into more libraries), which were really positive and long awaited moves.

Toolkit for me still is a developers choice. As long as the distributions and community manages the theming part, I'm fine with the developers using their preferred toolkit.
Doesn't GTK just adapt your GTK Theme.

If there is no proper GTK Theme for my KDE Theme that's rather hard. Same goes for Qt in GTK+ Environments, if there is no proper Qt-Skin it does not integrate nicely.
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