Chopstix wrote:Sipos you failed to mention what it is you want to do with this graphics card. Just run a smooth KDE4? Play modern games like Far Cry 3? Run GPU computations such as generating bitcoins or decryption? Use it for stitching images together? You can't choose the right card if you don't decide on it's primary purpose.
Primarily I'm buying the card for gaming. If it wasn't for that, I wouldn't be buying a new card at all. That said, I'm mainly asking though not about performance but, about how frequently there are problems building the drivers, with the drivers working etc.
As an example of what I am trying to avoid: in the past, when I've used AMD closed source drivers, I either had hard to fix problems with X crashing or, more recently, I had no problem with them working for kernels they built against but, found that they didn't build against newer kernels until a long time after they were released. In particular, I was stuck for a long time with wanting to use a newer kernel (for which there were gentoo-sources so, not a git kernel or anything) because it had drivers that worked for my wireless card but, not being able to use it with the closed source AMD drivers. Back then, I'd happily have traded that card for an NVidia one with worse performance if it would have worked sooner with the kernel release that had the wireless drivers I needed.
It's easier to get an idea of performance from review/benchmark articles but, not so easy to know if I'll be constantly having problems with the drivers so, it's how problematic drivers are that I'm asking about here.
I said that I was primarily interested in the closed source drivers because I've always viewed the open source ones as too slow for gaming or, not supporting enough of the features of cards but, it sounds like the open source drivers have improved a lot since I tried either (actually, I never got the open source radeon driver to work when I had an AMD card) to the point where I should be considering using them instead. I will definitely be trying the open source drivers for whatever card I go with. Even if I don't use the open source drivers, I'm a bit loathed to buy a card from a manufacturer that hasn't helped enough for the open source drivers for their cards to be reasonable so, even if I don't actually end up using them, how good the open source drivers are is a factor. I just don't really want to give my money to someone who is making it harder to use only free software on my computer (well, both major manufacturers are but, given I am going to buy a card from one of them for gaming, I'd rather it be from the most cooperative).