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Graphics Operating Systems Software BSD

Nvidia Releases Updated Drivers for FreeBSD 86

brsmith4 writes "Nvidia has released their latest drivers for the FreeBSD platform. This release addresses a number of issues and has been anticipated for well over a year. You will need at least 4.9-STABLE or any of the 5.x-CURRENT releases to install them. Some of the new features include added support for the latest NVIDIA GPUs including GeForce 6800 Series and improved interaction with -CURRENT's new threading libraries, not to mention the fact that my Dell laptop no longer shuts off the LCD when the driver gets loaded. The driver also provides tighter integration with the linux execution environment, making it very easy to run your favorite linux game titles. You can pick up the driver here. Pay no attention to the date, August 13th, 2003. It was a type-o."
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Nvidia Releases Updated Drivers for FreeBSD

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  • by b00m3rang ( 682108 ) on Saturday August 14, 2004 @09:43PM (#9971386)
    This kind of support for open source users is what keeps me coming back to certain hardware manufacturers. The more companies realize this, the better it is for everyone.
    • by Brandybuck ( 704397 ) on Saturday August 14, 2004 @11:44PM (#9971999) Homepage Journal
      It's too late for me. Tired of waiting for a driver that didn't hang my system, I finally sold my NVidia card and bought an ATI Radeon 9200. The Open Source radeon driver might not be as good as the proprietary nvidia driver, but it's more than enough to meet my needs.

      I understand both sides of the free vs proprietary driver debate. But for me it comes down to a driver that I don't have to wait a year for to get a bug fix.
      • I was about to do the same but decided to meddle with the old driver for a last time to see if it could in fact work. It did work for me upto and including FreeBSD 5.1, and I got it to work again on -current by basicly going back to a kernel and pthread setup similar to 5.1, which of course made using -current a bit pointless.. but hey, I got a working workstation with fast opengl, and that is what I needed..

        This new fdriver is good news, means I can go back to tracking -current and actually seeing some re
    • by ctr2sprt ( 574731 ) on Sunday August 15, 2004 @02:37AM (#9972573)
      That's exactly right. NVIDIA's continuing high-quality support for FreeBSD and Linux has made me an avid supporter of their cards. Let's be honest: they aren't making any money off this. There just aren't enough Linux gamers (and even fewer FreeBSD ones) for it to be worthwhile for them, but they're doing it anyway. That counts for a hell of a lot in my book.

      Forgive me for the glorified "me too" post.

      • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Sunday August 15, 2004 @03:21PM (#9975247) Homepage Journal
        They're just hedging their bets. I doubt it's costing them all that much (in their grand scheme) to support linux and bsd, and if either or both of these operating systems ever take off like the proverbial skyrocket, their support of the community will be well-rewarded.
        • by ShavenGoat ( 63696 ) * on Monday August 16, 2004 @07:44PM (#9986264) Homepage
          I don't know how true that is. The high end video cards for scientific computing cost well over $2k, which puts in a large margin for them to profit at least in one small area. In my experiance, not many visualization scientists use Windows for bleeding edge graphics.

          In addition, porting a graphics card to more than one platform gives the vendor a chance to find bugs in their design that they might not discover with a single platform release.
      • by archen ( 447353 ) on Sunday August 15, 2004 @10:09PM (#9977231)
        I wouldn't be so sure that they're not making money off of it. Personally, I bought an nvidia card because of the Linux/BSD support (whee, big deal right?) I also make the purchasing decisions where I work (we build our own machines). I always try to make sure that our machines aren't tied to any OS be it by software OR hardware. Yeah, we use windows now, but if we switch to Linux then I know the nvidia support will (hopefully still) be there. So nvidia is the default choice. That's 50 machines and counting.

        In a similar way I was looking for a SATA RAID card for my machine since I couldn't get the on board Promise junk to work. Now what card would I choose? It seems like the best support came from 3ware , and they make pretty good cards too. Now they have a loyal customer and I'll ALWAYS recommend them over the competition.

        They might not make the money back on a 1 on 1 customer basis, but I think that they're making quite a bit of it back in mind share of tech people. I'm not significant by myself, but my range of influence between work, my friends, and various people reaches pretty far. At some point marketing glitz can only go so far. Proof of support for your products can make a bigger difference than marketing in some cases.
      • by be-fan ( 61476 )
        NVIDIA is making money off the Linux drivers. NVIDIA is pretty much the only game in town for Linux graphics workstations, something which quite a few companies are using these days (eg: ILM). Since they have to write Quadro drivers for this market anyway, it's easy for them to support consumer-level NVIDIA cards too.

      • by mi ( 197448 )
        A binary-only driver is not "high-quality" support. I want my next machine to be an amd64-based FreeBSD box. XFree86 and X.org compile on the platform, but these NVidia drivers will not work...
  • Type-o? (Score:2, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward
    If it was a bad type-o, then was it a type-o negative?
  • Will this work on 5.2.1 release or will I have to wait til 5 stablizes?
  • About damn time ! (Score:3, Informative)

    by SILIZIUMM ( 241333 ) on Sunday August 15, 2004 @10:15AM (#9973594) Homepage
    An update every 6 months is welcome for sure ! I hope they will sync their release path with the Linux drivers, THAT would be awesome (ie when the Linux driver is avaiable, the FreeBSD one will be (or within days...)).
    • These new drivers rock too. My frame rates are phenominal and my dell laptop finally works. Its been a long wait especially when you're being forced to run linux instead of the OS you really want to run.
    • I hope they will sync their release path with the Linux drivers, THAT would be awesome (ie when the Linux driver is avaiable, the FreeBSD one will be (or within days...)).

      That would suck.

      The second-best thing about the FreeBSD drivers, is that we manage to miss-out on some of the bugs often found in the Linux versions.

      In case anyone is wondering, the #1 best thing about the FreeBSD drivers, is that they are something like 90% source, while the Linux drivers are more like 90% binary...

  • Thanks, nVIDIA (Score:2, Interesting)

    by agraupe ( 769778 )
    I use linux, not BSD, but I imagine the two are close in some aspects. It took me literally a minute to install nVIDIA drivers on my gentoo box, whereas the "integrated graphics" I had prior to that took the better part of a day searching, patching various things, recompiling kernels, and installing. It is good to see that some hardware companies *do* care about open-source support. And I really don't care that the driver isn't open, as long as it's free (beer).
  • Its just a theory... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by andreyw ( 798182 ) on Tuesday August 17, 2004 @01:39AM (#9988367) Homepage
    But I think I know why the (new) FreeBSD drivers are better than the linux ones released some time ago.

    Simple - nVidia is trying out something new, and in order to get some testing they choose FreeBSD. If the drivers backfire, there will be less noise from the user-land. They can then always claim -well, its just some problem we encountered on BSD. Think of this as a beta-test. The new linux drivers should be just around the corner :-).

    But hey, nVidia has succeeded in making me give FreeBSD a test-drive.
  • Although the "Unix on the Desktop" market segment, as it relates to 3d cards and 3d games is small (but much more cooler) but they are making money, (just bought a 500 dollar 6800 Ultra from BFG, because of the GPU's Support for the Linux operating system I'm so fond of. Regardless, even if I did not make them any money the way NVIDIA is going about business is really smart. First off you have to realize their not all together a 3d card company. They do other things as well, Chipsets, Audio, Networks, etc.

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