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I'm here because i don't know what to do to replace my actual laptop. I'm not a big player but my GTX670MX begins to be old for my games. The games that i play are only Tyranny, Crusader Kings II, Civ6 (i can't play it actually), Divinity : OS and others games in this style.
I know that Wayland will not replace Xorg before long time (2-3 years ?) but i prepare the future. What is the actual status between Nvidia and Wayland ?
Can i to buy a Nvidia laptop today and not to be afraid about the comptability between N. and W. when W. will replace Xorg completly ?
Or the best way is to wait Intel KB-G+Vega M laptop ?
Or buy a Nvidia laptop and wait the reclocking firmware for Pascal GPUs :P
Thanks,
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I'm wanting to go with something that supports FreeSync, is this even supported in Linux yet? G-Sync is, but this would somewhat be a work laptop, and I have two 4k screens with FreeSync there, which is the reason I'm sort of looking (The default Intel GPU can get rather slow, though Wayland seems to run smoother than Xorg, it has it's own weird share of issues).
I saw a few Ryzen 5/7 laptops out there. Not sure how they perform yet though. I haven't really looked into AMD since the original Bulldozer chip run. Last AMD laptop I had was a Radeon 3200, and the open source driver then was fairly terrible, and it quickly lost support in fglrx.
Any suggestions? I tend to get Asus stuff, and am rather against MSI (had a few too many bad things from them (like two!). Granted, laptop vs desktop hardware is usually pretty different in quality.
It is one year later and there are some interesting Ryzen 2xxxU laptops with integrated Vega8/Vega10 GPUs...
Can anybody share any experience with Vega8/Vega10 gaming on Linux please?
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I have read that freesync will be supported with next kernel.
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Mobile APUs from AMD usually are a year behind desktop CPUs, while using same numbering. I.e. while 3000 series for desktop will be third generation Ryzen, in the mobile it will be second.
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While I am overall satisfied with it (got it quite cheap on sale), there are a few downsides to it (apart from having Windows preinstalled). First of all, to be able to boot, you need both a reasonably new kernel (≥ 4.15) and you must add the kernel parameter
pci=noacpi
, as the CPU will otherwise hang immediately after GRUB.I started out by installing Ubuntu 16.04.5 on it, and while it did work well with the workaround mentioned, it had issues with seemingly random freezes about once every few hours of usage. These sometimes required a hard reboot (that is, I needed to hold down the power button until it shut down) while they could otherwise be fixed by rebooting using SysRQ. Upgrading to Ubuntu 18.04.1 (kernel 4.18) mostly fixed this, as freezes now only happens once every few weeks or so (despite heavy usage).
Performance-wise, however, I have nothing to complain about. Using nightly Mesa it runs the games I want just fine, although I don't play titles which are graphically demanding. For example, Grim Dawn works great through DXVK, and while Darksiders III ran okay in the beginning, it slowed down dramatically, which turned out to be caused by insufficient RAM (so it hit my swap instead).
However for non-gaming purposes, it is extremely good (for the price). The processor is fast, and it is nice to have four cores (especially when compiling code).
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Haswell + NVidia Optimus.
Trust me - I will never, NEVER, never again buy a notebook with an integrated + dedicated GPU. Be it a muxed or non-muxed configuration. It's just a pain. Not sure Bumblebee and the like is working flawless by now, but this pissed me off for three lives.
Next notebook will be an AMD + integrated.
That should perfectly suit my needs.
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Nvidia is ok if you know what are you doing rather than believing myths.
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Nvidia have no interest in supporting graphics on Linux laptops. So use laptops with either AMD or Intel GPUs who support them properly.
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If you would have actually look the post i linked , you would see solution here used is Nvidia Prime and not an unofficial solution like Bumblebee.
Yet you would also see , they're also working on more proper approach.
Who needs to read anyway right?
Shmerl POV : Nvidia bad , Steam bad ; AMD good , GOG good
Please stop fanboying so hard.
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Nvidia PRIME is broken. Or rather just under-implemented, in completely inept manner. Nvidia simply didn't implement routing discrete GPU over integrated one with PRIME.
You can can read Nvidia own documentation next time, instead of random forum posts and avoid spreading false claims:
http://us.download.nvidia.com/XFree86/Linux-x86_64/415.27/README/randr14.html
So I'll repeat what I said - avoid this garbage.
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It is NOT broken , it works as intended. I personally use it.
https://devtalk.nvidia.com/default/topic/957814/linux/prime-and-prime-synchronization/
Again , they're working on Optimus to be like on Windows ; there won't be no need to select gpu via gui.
https://devtalk.nvidia.com/default/topic/957981/linux/prime-render-offloading-on-nvidia-optimus/post/5276481/#5276481
I don't see what is the problem , it works. Despite you call it broken.
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"Working" you mean. Optimus exists since 2010: https://blogs.nvidia.com/blog/2010/02/09/world-meet-optimus/
Nvidia surely were diligently working for 9 years on supporting it... And after 9 years it's not even working as it should. It's called garbage support. If you want to waste money on garbage - it's your own problem.
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