I want to make the move to Mint at the end of Win10 in a week or so, but I’ve heard some horror stories about how tough it can be to get Nvidia GPUs working with them. As it is I have a 4060TI and no money for an AMD GPU. If I can’t get my GPU working with Linux I’m probably gonna end up having to stick with Windows untim I can afford an AMD GPU, the thought of which doesn’t exactly excite me.

  • Sophienomenal@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    43 minutes ago

    If you want the easiest experience possible with Nvidia, I’d recommend Bazzite (and go with the KDE Plasma version). It comes with everything preinstalled and consistent across installations. Plus, it’s a tank when it comes to stability; very hard to break it due to the atomic nature. Just install everything through the built in store and you’ll be fine. Installing programs is much easier than Windows in Linux due to easy software stores. Bazzite currently uses Bazaar as its software store.

  • Sunsofold@lemmings.world
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    57 minutes ago

    I’ve been trying different flavors on my machines with Nvidia cards. It usually just works well enough for me. Did Garuda for a microsecond, mint for a moment, Ubuntu for a few, and am now trying Debian and Endeavour. I’ve honestly had more issues coming from arch peculiarities than from nvidia. Just give it a go if you have the drive space. It seems like there’s more of a question of how well your chosen flavor meshes with your chosen hardware than one of ‘can I even get this working?’

  • sobchak@programming.dev
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    1 hour ago

    My main workstation runs Debian and has a 3090. No issues that I’m aware of. When I used to use Mint, I think I remember Mint having a GUI to easily select the Nvidia driver you want to use, so it was very easy. In Debian, you just have to run ~10 commands in shell to install the proprietary Nvidia driver. I have an older laptop with an Nvidia GPU too; that one is more annoying because I don’t think any distro supports integrated/dedicated GPU auto-switching (I just have it set to use the Nvidia GPU all the time).

  • lemmalamma@lemmygrad.ml
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    2 hours ago

    Yes if you want to do anything non-trivial. I switched to AMD because of how much of a pain it is to use nvidia in Linux. IIRC Wayland literally has a hidden option that says --my-next-gpu-wont-be-nvidia.

  • tabular@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    I thought the title was “Why is it so hard to get Nvidia working with Linux” but I was mistaken. That’s the answer.

    [Linus_Saying_FU_Nvidia.mkv]

  • Mactan@lemmy.ml
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    4 hours ago

    will it work? probably. will you have to downgrade more often than any other GPU vendor? also probably

  • Nindelofocho@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    Im using a 3080, nobara and bazzite have worked flawlessly for me so far though im semi active in the bazzite community and a few people have varying issues with nvidia from what ive seen. Usually the issues are a little more edge case like game streaming but with a particular set up

  • Thteven@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    You can try a distro that includes the driver on installation to avoid a some of the headache. I have a 4060ti and I’m using Cachyos with zero issues.

  • Ramen 🍜(she/her)@lemmy.ml
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    5 hours ago

    It’s easy to install nVidia drivers nowadays. The real issues will be using them. Maybe I just got a bad card, but maybe nVidia is actual garbage. I don’t know.

  • skibidi@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    Nvidia historically didn’t invest in Linux drivers.

    Things have gotten a bit better, but there are still plenty of issues with Wayland compatibility specifically.

    Install the proprietary driver and it will work, but under Wayland you may have issues with resuming from sleep, stacked transparency, fractional resolution scaling, and HDR compatibility.

  • melroy@kbin.melroy.org
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    12 hours ago

    It will work. Under Linux mint for example you can use the firmware installer to install the correct Nvidia driver.

    Too bad nvidia drivers are proprietary, so it’s not part the default kernel drivers. That is why I like AMD so much more, it has open sourcer drivers. Fk nvidia 😁

    • melroy@kbin.melroy.org
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      12 hours ago

      Then playing games you will of course need wine or Proton in case of windows games.

      For native Linux games it’s the best thing. Ideally have a game that supports vulkan for the best performance. Or opengl.

  • ☂️-@lemmy.ml
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    9 hours ago

    usually not, it can be kind of a pain when it has issues, but that’s uncommon nowadays.

  • cyberwolfie@lemmy.ml
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    10 hours ago

    No. I have a RTX 3050 Ti Laptop which I have not had many issues with. The biggest issue I have experienced was that a game completely froze at the same point every time. This was due to a regression in their drivers. They spent their sweet time fixing it to, and following the issue thread highlights one of the main issues with their drivers being non-free: extremely competent users providing logs and effort to troubleshoot, but unable to work on the fix themselves. And what seemed to be summer interns replying once in a while and nothing happening for a long while.

    But that said, I find the hate overblown. You could get tge impression that running Linux on a machine with an Nvidia-GPU will instantly burn down your house or spawn a portal to hell. It will not. I will get an AMD card at the next crossroads, but I am not ditching my card now just because it is Nvidia. It works fine enough.