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@owenfromcanada @Akasazh I just want to mention that old amd GPUs require a proprietary driver, from my humble logic, that requires tinkering, like for Nvidia cards that do require proprietary drivers, but even Nvidia embraced Open-Source so there's nvidia-open now, in short, now, there's 0 reason to use proprietary trash, except on special circumstances
Good to know! I haven't had any AMD GPUs, but it was my understanding they've been well supported for a while.
Unfortunately, the open source Nvidia driver isn't suitable for gaming yet. But some distros (Mint at least) provide an easy GUI to switch to proprietary drivers. Very easy tinkering, as these things go.
@owenfromcanada do you happen to know the name of such tool? I know Garuda, Ubuntu & many distros have them, but since my priority was stability even on stress conditions, my daily driver is Endeavour OS, but it lacks that feature, it has everything otherwise
It's just called "Driver Manager" in Mint, I'm guessing it's specific to the distro. I've tried a few different ones, and it's by far the easiest to switch compared to any other. I think it can theoretically be installed on any Ubuntu-based distro, but I don't know of anything for EndeavorOS.
@owenfromcanada I know how easy, user and beginner-friendly it is, since 2008 I had my fair share of distro-hopping among debian & RHEL families, but they all broke when I installed them on my Nvidia-powered Laptops, 3 years ago I had enough so I began my tour with the Arch family, manjaro was an unpleasant host, even though is for gamers & very user-friendly but super unstable &, ahem, governed by clowns, I tried Garuda but it's gaming focused, I need an all-purpose distro, so EOS was my go-to