That for one and the last Laptop that had an nvidia Graphics card without an intel one was my HP Probook from 2005 with 1GB RAM. Where the Graphics card is so old it is not even supported with the 340 driver.
All later ones have Intel Graphics (Or AMD) in the SoC as intel successfully pushed everybody out of the market. Laptops with Nvidia graphics Only after 2008 are rare Gaming Market devices. With at least a 2000 Euro price tag. Considering our absolute null compatibility with games atm (Although i've just heard of a possible wine port?) My conclusion still stays firmly with upgrading to 390 by default. And add instructions as Stefan described. Greetings Till On 05.10.19 11:21, Stephan Althaus wrote: > On 10/05/19 09:29, Michal Nowak wrote: >> Hi Till, >> >> On 10/04/19 08:33 AM, Till Wegmüller wrote: >>> Hi Michal >>> >>> Anything as old as an NVIDIA GeForce 220 so slow imho that not many >>> people sell these online anymore. Considering that you can get a cheap >>> current low end graphics card for below 100Euro it is not a stretch to >>> say that we exchange the 340 driver with 390. >> >> I tend to agree but still this might be a problem for integrated >> systems like laptops, where card replacement is not an option. But >> luckily I guess nvidia GPU wasn't a thing in this field before Optimus? >> > > The older Laptops have legacy boot and a VESA desktop or at least a > working console. > So along with a wiki article describing how to enable a 340 version the > user has a very good chance to get a good working X desktop. > > Just my 2c, > Stephan > > > _______________________________________________ > openindiana-discuss mailing list > [email protected] > https://openindiana.org/mailman/listinfo/openindiana-discuss _______________________________________________ openindiana-discuss mailing list [email protected] https://openindiana.org/mailman/listinfo/openindiana-discuss
