root wrote:I suppose you're right.. as far as "doing stuff at home" is concerned. But distributing it is a different story. It's a very hard question. At the moment, two things are 100% clear to me:
- Users need these drivers
- the kernel devs have a point (if not legally (which doesn't really matter to me), morally).
So to be honest I really don't know about distributing them in Mint.. I see a strong reason why I should, and also a strong reason why I shouldn't. the only thing that's for sure at the moment is that they won't be present in Bea.
I've been doing some soul searching since my initial reply about gaming and such. I did some research and found out that a radeon 9200 will play the games I want decent enough for me and the 9200 is fully supported for 3d acceleration in X.org so I bought one from a local shop that had them on for $20CDN. I then found out my motherboard agp wasn't properly supported by the kernel and that the nvidia drivers take care of it for nvidia cards. I've been wanting to upgrade another PC for a while so I decided to put that hardware in the other PC and got a Via based P4 mobo and a P4 cpu with em64t. Everything works out of the box except that the bios on the motherboard has a bug and is dated 1906 so I have to pass acpi=force to get ubuntu or mint to boot.
I have full 3d gaming that I am satisfied with and I am not going against the wishes of the kernel devs. I figured since I have used Linux for so long and have come to love it so much I ought to respect the kernel devs' wishes about binary drivers.
From the research I did, Via usually gives all details on its hardware so kernel drivers can be written. ATI has provided info to the the community for hardware up to and including the 9200 which is decent enough to play Enemy Territory.
The other hardware will be put into a windows gaming box.
Just thought I'd let you all know.
BTW root, I'm using Bea now and it is working out just great.