cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/16149785

Cross-posting here for more opinions.

Gentlemen, just for context, I usually use Linux. I have been a user of Debian, Ubuntu, and Fedora for a few years.

Recently, I acquired a decent graphics card (GeForce RTX 4070) and decided to uninstall my Windows and install Linux.

I saw that Pop!_OS already has an image with everything pre-configured for Nvidia. Is this pre-configuration worth it, are the games more stable on this distribution, or is it the same as manually installing Nvidia’s proprietary drivers on Manjaro?

  • @yala
    link
    123 days ago

    But as far as I know, NVIDIA just supports enterprise distros.

    I tried looking this up, but to no avail. Got any proof to back this up?

    I didnt know that, but uBlue uses random OCI container builds by Fedora for all their stuff, that Fedora doesnt even officially use themselves.

    I don’t know how it is currently. However, initially, images were provided by maintainers affiliated to Fedora. Could you provide a link in which your current understanding is better described/explained?

    • @boredsquirrel@slrpnk.net
      link
      fedilink
      223 days ago

      I tried looking this up, but to no avail. Got any proof to back this up?

      Interesting, I only found a different site that offered the download specifically for developers to embed in their distros.

      It was AMDGPUPro that only supports enterprise Linux.

      Could you provide a link

      I didnt find it. Search in the Atomic issue tracker, siosm wrote somewhere that the images are built on Gitlab and are the foundation of uBlue.

      While Gitlab is not the official distribution method, and this was an issue about adapting these images for the main Fedora variants. So they arent even used, but built.

      That upstream unused images are taken as the base for uBlue is pretty funny. But they have a future, and will likely become the main way of shipping Fedora Atomic.

      Then it is also truly image-based, unlike the OSTree repo currently.