this post was submitted on 19 Nov 2025
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[–] Smoogs@lemmy.world 15 points 1 day ago (4 children)

Just be forewarned:

Nvidia requires a bit of work.

SeLinux….it is a giant bag of gotcha.

That all said I’m not regretting my conversion.

[–] SirActionSack@aussie.zone 2 points 14 hours ago (1 children)

I'm using tumbleweed and getting my NVIDIA card to work was some effort but only because I was an idiot and didn't run the SUSE update tool that would have fixed everything for me :-/

[–] Digit@lemmy.wtf 2 points 4 hours ago (1 children)

:)

Nostalgic for me.

I started on suse in 2003, with nvidia. No problems had. Suse made things easy long before ubuntu came along pretending it was the first to make Linux easy.

[–] percent@infosec.pub 2 points 3 hours ago

OpenSUSE always seemed underrated IMO, especially in those pre-Ubuntu days. Such a polished UX overall

[–] Gloomy@mander.xyz 8 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I use Linux Mint and Nvidea and never had any problem what so ever with it. But maybe i just have been lucky.

[–] Smoogs@lemmy.world 1 points 1 hour ago (1 children)

If you haven’t had to deal with kde plasma for your needs, then yes: consider yourself lucky cuz more than two settings on the bios needs to change as well. And that’s not even going into the dual boot scenario. Which is fresh hell. Especially with the most recent upgrades with locks and dynamic cards. And learning that every motherboard handles it differently even if you have matched all other types of hardware.

Just a reminder everyone’s needs are different. And some of this is way easier on windows if you’re arguing at just out of the box working

Not that I’m regretting going Linux. I’m just regretting the fanbois who are insufferable and obnoxious since coming to Linux. Really rides on my patience after several installs and learning all this by hand.

So many reveal that after I put the foot down all they did was just install to do some real basic shit and call it easy. They know nothing and need to sit down. Either help or Shut up, let people work through their required build.

We can be better than this.

I have an Nvidia card and run plasma and everything "just worked" for me including the proprietary drivers. Zero configuration (I am using CachyOS but Manjaro was fine as well as mint).

Figured I would add another data point for those thinking about switching but are nervous about the Nvidia support.

[–] Gloomy@mander.xyz -4 points 1 day ago

I use Linux Mint and Nvidea and never had any problem what so ever with it. But maybe i just have been lucky.

[–] Gloomy@mander.xyz -3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I use Linux Mint and Nvidea and never had any problem what so ever with it. But maybe i just have been lucky.

[–] dogs0n@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (2 children)

Me no use Mint, but the only problem I get is the sleep bug (waking from sleep results in a black screen). I've looked into it a few times and all I can assume is it's probably nvidia so I gave up on solution hunting and pray one day it's fixed (it's getting slightly better over the years or maybe thats a placebo idk, it seems to fully break quite rarely now).

After my pc sleeps I usually have to switch sessions with ctrl+alt+ then back to the one running KDE and it (nvidia?) revives itself and I can keep working on watching my movies.

Just sharing my experience because mby someone smart here is thinking "yo yur dumb just do this", but honest it's not a big deal for me anymore.

Oh wait I wanna add that apart from this (tiny in my opinion) bug, everything esle has been smooth, even some gaming (it's possible im in a rare state to be getting this bug since I haven't reinstalled my root partition in like 5+ years, even tho I have swapped distros a couple times).

[–] Digit@lemmy.wtf 1 points 4 hours ago (1 children)

Possibly not a "solution" (or workaround rather) you want, but... I just switch all that stuff off.

The cool thing about Linux and FOSS is "many eyes make all bugs shallow", and so if you search for the issue, someone else may have already reported it, in the community, or even in the issue tracker, and if not, you can do that, to help others, and then the developers (which can be anyone, even you, btw) can have a better handle on how to mend it.

Every problem, an opportunity, to give back. That's how we got here, in these 4 decades since Richard Stallman announced the start of the GNU project.

[–] dogs0n@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 minute ago

What stuff do you switch off? (Did you have this bug previously?)

I tried researching this issue a while ago, it was hard to find anything, but it's not a bug worth spending any more time on unfortunately since it's an easy fix whenever it happens.

Wish I was smart enough to contribute hehe, sadly don't even have the time anyways to sit down and figure it out (someone might already be figuring it out, it's slowly getting rarer and rarer that the bug occurs, still at least one every other day, though much better than the at least multiple times a day from before).

[–] Alaknar@sopuli.xyz 3 points 19 hours ago (2 children)

I’ve looked into it a few times and all I can assume is it’s probably nvidia

It's not, I have something very similar and I have a Radeon.

[–] dogs0n@sh.itjust.works 1 points 4 hours ago* (last edited 4 hours ago) (1 children)

Oh interesting, I guess a general bug then.

This is over many years so memory might be bad, but I never had this on my old rx 580, then started getting it sometime after swapping to an nvidia gpu. Guess it was just coincidence, if I'm remembering it right anyways. That always fueled my suspicion it was nvidia.

Thanks for sharing your experience, it's eye opening. I guess I have no problems specific to nvidia then (pre and post open source driver).

p.s. if you have ever looked into this, do you have something you blame?

[–] Alaknar@sopuli.xyz 1 points 4 hours ago

I poked around the Net a bit here and there, tried a couple different solutions people suggested, but the only thing I managed to change was that the moment I clicked "Sleep", the image on my monitors would completely freeze (as in: screens on, desktop and applications on full display), and the only solution was to do a hard reboot.

So, basically, I just stopped clicking "Sleep"... :D

[–] Robaque@feddit.it 2 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

Probably not even mint-specific since it happens on pop os too

[–] Alaknar@sopuli.xyz 1 points 9 hours ago

I had that on Kubuntu, Tuxedo OS and now I have it on Garuda Linux, so yeah.