>Is there any reason why you have to have support for that card? AFAIK, >there is no documentation available for that card, and the company that >made the chip no longer exists (at least not in its previous form). Not >only that, there are MUCH better cards available for PCI and AGP that >perform many orders of magnitude better. I seem to remember that this >card can't even play the original GLQuake at a decent frame rate.
I don't *need* DRI/OpenGL support for the card, but it would be incredibly nice to have it. Right now it is in my current setup, driving my SGI 1600SW flat panel and is the only AGP card that will drive that monitor without using SGI's Multilink Adapter (expensive, $450+ on eBay). It's an excellent display, and has Xfree support, so I am not really about to part with it. The 1600SW is hands down the best flat panel at an affordable price that I have seen. That being said, I thought this might be a nice challenge to a developer, help someone make some money, get me OpenGL (not looking for a gaming card anyway...), AND give back to the community all at once. [C]arlos Noguera ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by: Etnus, makers of TotalView, The debugger for complex code. Debugging C/C++ programs can leave you feeling lost and disoriented. TotalView can help you find your way. Available on major UNIX and Linux platforms. Try it free. www.etnus.com _______________________________________________ Dri-devel mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/dri-devel
