There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

Amongussussyballs100 ,

I cannot speak for this card itself, but moving from Nvidia to AMD made my life so much easier. Wayland works a treat, and updates never leave me with a black screen from silly diver issues. However anything for local llms is a massive pain in the ass to use compared to Nvdias cuda, rocm is quite half-baked.

abcdqfr OP ,

I’ll definitely be keeping my nvidia card for ai/ml /cuda purposes. It’ll live in a dual boot box for windows gaming when necessary (bigscreen beyond, for now). II am curious to see what 16gb of amd vram will let me get up to anyway.

Sanctus ,
@Sanctus@lemmy.world avatar

I have had a shit time with my 2080 TI. If I had the money I’d jump for an 7800 XT in a heartbeat.

abcdqfr OP ,

We are not alone then. Thanks for your input!

circuitfarmer ,
@circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Switched everything over to AMD and have never needed to look back. It is way more It Just Works on AMD.

Love, the Steam Deck

AmbiguousProps ,

Yes. The nvidia drivers on linux are horrible, and always have been. Since I ditched my nvidia 2080 it’s been much more stable.

HumanPerson ,

IMO, intel has underrated linux drivers. You get solid 3d, codecs, compute, etc. ootb. Assuming your distro supports it. You may be looking into something higher end, though.

mrvictory1 ,

Intel iGPUs have good drivers. Arc drivers are still developing.

HumanPerson ,

I daily drive arc on linux. They’re not as bad as people say. Not fully there, but opencl support requires one package that is in most distros repos, same for video. Not saying they’re perfect, or even better than amd, but they are a lot better than people seem to think.

k_rol ,

I’m waiting for battlemage to give them a try. I really want them to succeed.

cybersandwich ,

I switched from Nvidia for amd for the same reason: “and is better on Linux”.

In my experience you are just making different tradeoffs. I use pop so your mileage may vary but Nvidia was easy to use and upgrade. It’s not nearly as bad as people let on.

AMD on the other hand isn’t as seamless as people let on. And the open source drivers, while awesome, don’t let you take advantage of the codecs for video streaming or even alot of the AI ML stuff, so you switch to the proprietary drivers and they are slightly buggy.

I wish I kept my 3070ti over the 6900xt.

Unless they figure out a way to let me use av1 or rocm more easily then my next card will be Nvidia again.

AProfessional ,

Video decoding/encoding should work fine, better than Nvidia as fewer things support nvdec (the vaapi wrapper is enough though).

boredsquirrel ,
@boredsquirrel@slrpnk.net avatar

In my experience, as a nongamer just laptop user, Intel is way more stable than AMD too. Might consider an Intel GPU? But I only know the integrated ones on Laptops, which work really well

cmnybo ,

The dedicated Intel GPUs have nowhere near as much performance as an RX 7900. The video encoder is very good though.

boredsquirrel ,
@boredsquirrel@slrpnk.net avatar

Also stuff like waking up from suspend, random freezes and power management work better than on AMD. I would assume this also applies to the Arc GPUs?

faede ,

I have Nvidia and now that explicit sync is out my system runs incredibly smoothly. Every game I have tried works great.

rem26_art ,
@rem26_art@fedia.io avatar

I've got a 7800XT now and I moved from a 1070 and I've been happy with it overall. I'm on Fedora and I bought the 7800 kinda close to launch, so I went through some issues that seem to have been solved by now. Nothing that really made me go "gee I wish I hadn't switched".

I don't do anything related to streaming, or machine learning, so I can't really speak to it's ability with those, but gaming has been stable, and, aside from a now solved problem with rocm, it works fine with Blender cycles (at least on Fedora 40). Davinci Resolve has worked fine too. On launch, there wasn't VAAPI support for AV1, but that works just fine for me now. (VAAPI is the open source interface for GPU video acceleration).

Currently, I'd say the experience is perfectly fine.

Crackhappy ,
@Crackhappy@lemmy.world avatar

I have the 7800 and love it. Best bang for the buck I could find, about 4 months ago.

dRLY ,
@dRLY@lemmy.ml avatar

I am all AMD both PC (currently Windows but have used Linux on systems with AMD and Nvidia over the years) and Steam Deck (of course). AMD is overall easier. That being said, Nvidia is supposedly in process of making opensource drivers. I believe they are going to be focusing on their newer cards. So it might be worth researching into any recent news on their progress. Always good to have options if you get a better deal on one vs another.

Sammirr ,

Worth noting that Nvidia only intends to open source the kernel driver. This is only half the driver, as a userspace blob will still be required, and that will remain closed and proprietary.

thayer ,

We swapped our 2080s for 6800 XTs last year and couldn’t be happier…a 7900 GRE should be great for gaming, but I can’t speak to LLM performance.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • [email protected]
  • random
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines