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9 points

Well, what I really wonder is if because the kernel can include it, if this will make an install more agnostic. Like literally pull my disk out of a gaming nvidia machine, and plug it into my AMD machine with full working graphics. If so this is good for me since I use a usb-c nvme ssd for my os to boot from on my work and home machines and laptops for when I’m not worrying. All three currently have nvidia cards and this works ok. I have some games to chill and take a break. My works core OS for work MDM etc unmodified. I like it that way.

I realise this is not a terribly useful case, but I could see it for graphically optimised VM migrations too not that I have many. Less work in transitioning gives greater flexibility.

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2 points

Like literally pull my disk out of a gaming nvidia machine, and plug it into my AMD machine with full working graphics.

This should work already, i switched from nvidia to amd this year by swapping the cards and removing the nvidia drivers some time later.

I guess it’s because the drivers only apply to their specific hardware, so no problems having amd and nvidia drivers present at the same time.

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1 point

The kernel drivers were never an issue, but userspace drivers fixed this many years ago with glvnd.

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1 point

@jokro @biscuitswalrus Yanked out my 3060TI and replaced it with a Intel A770 16gb “special” edition and gaming on a 49" odessey on linux has never been better.

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2 points

this works ok

People said that the new 555 Nvidia drivers works good.

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