• @ransomwarelettuce@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    There is no doubt that AMD is a better company than NVIDIA in OSS terms.

    But don’t simp for a company, vote with your wallet and always look for the best and consumer friendly product.

    For now, not gonna lie AMD is pretty rad, but I hope next generation Intel GPUs are competitive.

    • Prethoryn Overmind
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      1210 months ago

      I think AMD is a great competitor and we need more competition to lay it to NVIDIA and AMD as well, BUT HOLY FUCK. I can’t stand AMD’s software/control panel vs NVIDIA’s.

        • @taco_ballerina@lemmy.world
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          1210 months ago

          Aye. The Nvidia control center was cool when I installed it for my Ti 4600 in 2002 and not much has changed. I’m not particularly fond but the aesthetics of the Radeon software, but it beats the heck out of the semi-useless GeForce experience. I have to make an account just to see if there’s a driver update available? I can’t even control fan speeds in Windows without third party software?

          They’re both bad but in comparison Nvidia’s offering is garbage.

          • @iegod@lemm.ee
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            110 months ago

            You don’t need an account for drivers. You can still get those for free off their website just like you could in 1999. You only need an account for their experience app.

        • Prethoryn Overmind
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          310 months ago

          Care to explain your gripes?

          At least with NVIDIA’s control panel I can find what I am looking for but my god AMD’s software feels so damn unorganized.

          • @liamwb@lemm.ee
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            410 months ago

            Well I guess there’s two parts of the nvidia software experience, geforce and the control panel. The control panel is functionally fine, but the ui is very dated and the available features are a bit limited. Geforce is pretty widely reviled as far as I can tell so I won’t go into it.

            I just find the amd ui nice, and I like how you get quite simple and direct control over your video card, eg you can do some simple oc/undervolting, choose which software special sauce you want at a glance, and so on.

            • @propaganja@lemmy.world
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              510 months ago

              My first-ever Nvidia card was a 3080Ti. After installation I was genuinely confused and kept clicking around everywhere looking for the real settings panel.

              Actually I remember, my older laptop had a MX150 (lol) so I did know all about GeForce Control Panel and Experience—I just thought they were the outdated bargain-basement solution assigned to POS hardware like mine, not worth (understandably) slapping shiny new chrome on.

              Subsequently I had automatically assumed without a doubt in my mind that the pandemic card I had paid for in tainted blood would have some uber slick new interface that I couldn’t wait to play around with.

              Needless to say, my disappointment was immeasurable and my day was ruined.

    • @iegod@lemm.ee
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      510 months ago

      I thought the current gen Intel ones are actually pretty decent. Solid budget choice for modern games.

      • @EvokerKing@lemmy.world
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        110 months ago

        If it can run them… I sold mine because they never actually fixed the drivers. Out of hundreds of games on my PC, it was able to run 3-4. This isn’t before their updates either. This happened 2 weeks ago. It can’t run davinci resolve despite having good encoders, it couldn’t even fucking run valorant Also they are only good in benchmarks, I found that my old 3050 was outperforming it in terms of fps.