• @Kit@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    144 days ago

    I’m actually using Nobara, but it’s not very popular so I just say Fedora in day-to-day conversation. From my understanding, Fedora-based distros play better with Nvidia GPUs.

    • @spooky2092@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      4 days ago

      Best of luck to you my friend. Like I said, fedora was my go-to for years, and I regularly fought against the Nvidia drivers and kept going back to windows.

      I’m running AMD now, so I’m hoping my experience is better than it was when I was using nvidia

      • @zod000@lemmy.ml
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        134 days ago

        I’m responding to you, but this is more for others to see since you moved to AMD.

        I used Nvidia cards for many years on Linux and only recently switched back to AMD. The main issues I ran into with Nvidia were related to driver updates breaking things rather than things not working in general. So, I eventually found that holding Nvidia drivers to versions that worked without issues was the best bet and only updating them on occasion after they had been out for a bit and the consensus was that they weren’t breaking stuff.

        • @spooky2092@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          12 days ago

          Just to make things easier on others (or myself of the amd drivers have similar issues), how would one go about holding the driver at a specific version?

          • @zod000@lemmy.ml
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            21 day ago

            I’m on a Debian based distro, but it is super simple. To hold a driver, or any package to a version just use “sudo aptitude hold <name or package here>” to undo this at any point just use “sudo aptitude unhold <name or package here>”. If you use the GUI package manager, there is a “Lock Version” option in a menu that does it.

            If you’re on a Redhat based distro, Federa et al, I believe the keyword is “versionlock” for yum or dnf, but I would definitely recommend looking at a reference for the command before blinding following me on that one.

        • @spooky2092@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          2 days ago

          Just to make things easier on others (or myself if the AMD drivers have similar issues), how would one go about holding the driver at a specific version?