Well do not worry, every ati owner has got the same problemMaybe open your laptop and look if the gfx part could be replaced.
It already has. All you have to do is go to AMD's website and look up the drivers.
http://support.amd.com/us/gpudownloa...eon_linux.aspx gives you 12.6 (non-beta)
Most likely, although there is no guarantee and it probably won't be timely. It will happen when AMD's corporate partners request it.Will there be a version that supports xserver > 1.12? Or newer kernels?
Nope, I don't have the choice. I don't have the choice to run a 3.5 or 3.6 kernel to test the latest btrfs or whatever is new in those kernels.
Because AMD thinks I don't need to.
In the past I have always recommended AMD and I use AMD in two of my machines (CPU and video). With behavior like this they have lost me as a customer for the future.
My argument was:
He can stick with Ubuntu 12.04 LTS for Catalyst and it's better 3D Performance, playing Nexius etc...
He can test out the newest 12.10 Beta using radeon, testing the newest kernel and it's features...
That's his choice. He can even have them on a dual boot system, if he likes.
...probably his hardware is supported in 12.04 and he won't need the newest kernels to do so.
To have the newest kernel, just to have the newest kernel, without needing/using the new features? This doesn't seem that necessary.
But if he really stumbles upon a needed new feature, he has to make his decision. With some luck, Catalyst maybe even get's updated at that time.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not biased.
I'm writing this on a laptop with an ATI Mobility Radeon 9700. Support was dropped long ago and I don't have the choice any more. I have to use radeon, even for it's poor 3D performance and power management.
I just wanted to say, that his panic attack and swearing outburst was inappropriate.
Have you opened up a bugreport about this issue? r[36]00g development is changing almost daily, bugs are solved frequently and support improving.
I still agree AMD pulled the plug a little too soon, but with the opensource drivers being quite good and improving steadily, for anything but gaming it should be more then adequate.
Yes.
Quite good? You must be kidding. Poor power management (I must re-think if you can call that management, since you have to manage it yourself with choosing a profile), no video decoding, partially only 30% of the performance of Catalyst. If that is quite good I want to see what you would call bad.
I still agree AMD pulled the plug a little too soon, but with the opensource drivers being quite good and improving steadily, for anything but gaming it should be more then adequate.
radeon for me (and many other laptop owners) is unusable and an unusable driver is definitely not "quite good".
haha ,awesome!humor...
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