maybe that's just the minor change ( #DEFINE DEBUG 0considering the new driver is basically a new code-base, I'm surprised they have only bumped the release count by one.) compared to what happens on a monthly basis
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considering the new driver is basically a new code-base, I'm surprised they have only bumped the release count by one.
8.41: "Should have been revision 9, but we are too modest for that" edition.
Thank you AMD/ATI.
maybe that's just the minor change ( #DEFINE DEBUG 0considering the new driver is basically a new code-base, I'm surprised they have only bumped the release count by one.) compared to what happens on a monthly basis
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8.41 is not the Linuxversion. It is also the Windowsversion (with the marketing name being 7.9). It's the 41 driver since the new Catalyst driver was announced 41 month ago. The 9.* will happen when there's a complete rewrite of the Windows/all driver, too.
I don't think the driver's going to be open source.
When Michael was taunting us, he didn't write the word ("_______" instead of tonight).
But now he openly said "perhaps ... open-source". Since he's not allowed to reveal anything, we must assume that he didn't. So no open source
(otherwise he would have said "maybe in the near future...")![]()
Considering that I doubted that they'd be in a position to produce even something like the 8.41 drivers by the end of this year (don't ask- I can't tell you why...), I'd be cautious about doubting that they're not going to work on helping the Open Source community at least in the same way that Intel has.
Michael (who seems to have an inside track up in Canada right now...) seems to believe they're going to do something USEFUL in that regard. I'm not holding my breath (I like the color blue, but not on my skin...) but I'm going to adjust my doubtfulness upwards a little to be more hopeful about the whole thing at least for now.
No, but perhaps they will be working on making the specs available, or sanitizing the Orca codebase so that the core functionality is opened to the world. In all honesty, they don't have as much proprietary stuff in there, it's more covering for egg-on-face silicon flaws.