LinuxMCE Forums

General => Marketplace => Compatible Products & Services => Topic started by: singpolyma on August 21, 2007, 12:37:28 am

Title: Video Card Requirements
Post by: singpolyma on August 21, 2007, 12:37:28 am
Is this nVidia-only for now?  I see everyone suggesting nVidia for this, but is it the only supported system?  Is support for other systems planned?  Surely if full beryl with all plugins can run on it (mostly nVidia, ATI, and Intel) the graphics should support what is needed for this project?
Title: Re: Video Card Requirements
Post by: Luke122 on August 21, 2007, 01:06:36 am
Supposedly any card which can support alpha-blending will work. I've got a few ATI cards here that do support it, and I'll be testing them. It just seems that ATI's support within *ubuntu is pretty poor.

Some of the Intel cards support alpha blending, including the 745 and 915s.
Title: Re: Video Card Requirements
Post by: clarky2o2o on August 21, 2007, 01:23:41 am
hey luke what's the most low end you have successfully got working
Title: Re: Video Card Requirements
Post by: Luke122 on August 21, 2007, 05:17:11 pm
Well, using UI1 (no overlay), I was able to get the onboard video to work on my Compaq Presario 710ca. It's an S3 Twister "K" card, using 16mb of system memory. :)

I havent had a chance yet to test the 16mb or 32mb ATI Rage 128's, but they "supposedly" support Alpha Blending, according to ATI's website.

Title: Re: Video Card Requirements
Post by: totallymaxed on August 25, 2007, 12:19:38 pm
hey luke what's the most low end you have successfully got working

We have UI1 and video playback working excellently on Intel i915/i945/i965 motherboards using there Intel based on-board video capabilities.
Title: Re: Video Card Requirements
Post by: Hagen on August 29, 2007, 09:52:39 am
I havent had a chance yet to test the 16mb or 32mb ATI Rage 128's, but they "supposedly" support Alpha Blending, according to ATI's website.
Those two do work like a charm for UI1, but only Nvidia has "real" corporate proprietary Linux drivers, hence all the others run on the reverse engineered open source variants that is available, and none of them will support 3d or alpha blending (to my understanding).
Fiire does not use an Nvidia, but they bough a proprietary driver for their sollution.

I am sure I will be corrected if I am wrong, but that is why everyone is suggesting Nvidia solutions, and frankly that is how you can possibly push other manufacturers into supplying Linux drivers. Vote with your wallet?