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init=/sbin/openrc-init
-systemd -logind -elogind seatdI am NaN! I am a man!


Good question. Got rid of my old card because my monitor started to show colored lines and the resolution of the new one wasn't supported bu the old card. Card was certainly 10 years old then. I guess I'd turn to something else. But how much choice do you have? There is just nvidia, ati and intel. Can't say I have seen an intel card for sale.eccerr0r wrote:Seems most people are throwing away hardware instead of sticking with old kernels for the most part?
And most of those who don't want or plan to throw away hardware have chosen ATI?
If there were no driver gurus that figure out how to patch a kernel without nvidia help (i.e. if there were no 3rd party patches and you couldn't write your own patches), would people switch to something else or would you just not upgrade your kernel?
I'd write my own patches, and have in the past. I've contributed to the kernel itself in the past (and never had a poor interaction with Linus), but I find that the patches already exist by the time the new kernel is released.eccerr0r wrote:Seems most people are throwing away hardware instead of sticking with old kernels for the most part?
And most of those who don't want or plan to throw away hardware have chosen ATI?
If there were no driver gurus that figure out how to patch a kernel without nvidia help (i.e. if there were no 3rd party patches and you couldn't write your own patches), would people switch to something else or would you just not upgrade your kernel?
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nvidia-drivers-590 or later (latest as of 2/2026)Code: Select all
nvidia-drivers-580Code: Select all
nvidia-drivers-535
nvidia-drivers-570Code: Select all
nvidia-drivers-390
nvidia-drivers-470

If anyone needs these drivers, there are ebuilds with patches to get them running on newer kernels here: https://github.com/X11Libre/ports-gento ... ia-driversIonen wrote:These non-longer-updated permanently masked security hazard versions will have their last supported kernel go EOL in December 2027 (aka 6.1.x, 6.6.x will die a year earlier) and we'll probably drop them around that time rather than patch them downstream for newer kernels regardless of people needing them for old hardware. Overlays will probably step up in packaging/patching them though. 390.x and older are really starting to cause all sort of weird GL bugs with modern software though, and nobody can easily fix closed source libraries.Code: Select all
nvidia-drivers-390 nvidia-drivers-470

I was in a similar situation until recently with a slightly older card (GTX 780, Kepler microarchitecture), which required the 470- series. As soon as latest stable kernels were no longer able to build the 470- series, I upgraded. I chose the RTX 2060 (Turing microarchitecture) specifically to give me a very long runway to driver obsolescence--and to give me something on which to experiment with CUDA with modern APIs.eeckwrk99 wrote:I've been using a GTX 970 on my main machine since 2015.
I stuck with 535 for a while as I had issues with resume from suspend with 550 and newer. Now I'm using 580, the suspend issues I had are gone (for now...).
The plan is to stick with 580 until it until it reaches EOL in 2028. I can't use a newer driver anyway, 580 is the last one that supports Maxwell.
Then, I'll replace the GPU.
