Red Squirrel
[H]F Junkie
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2009
- Messages
- 9,217
I currently have two GTX 560's and it's been nothing but trouble. In Windows, the drivers for that card are unstable and always crash, causing screens to flicker. So I switched to Linux, but in Linux I've also had nothing but trouble, but different troubles.
1: Linux does not support having multi monitor that span two cards, so I ended up needing to have a second X session on the 3rd screen.
2: The 3rd screen constantly gets artifacts on it
3: Mouse cursor often gets stuck and I have to reboot, I lose keyboard and the cursor can move but it's stuck in the hand icon. I've been told it could be a video card issue.
4: nouveau driver is unusable for that card (this means any live CD as well). Screens flicker every second, unusable without literally going insane.
And many many other issues possibly related to the video card/driver.
So I've had it, time for a new video card. New Video card will also mean different drivers. Idealy I'd like a video card that will support 3 monitors, so I don't have to get two of em. I want to eliminate having 2 video cards, to rule out issues. Needs to be something known to work well in Linux. Can someone make a recommendation?
1: Linux does not support having multi monitor that span two cards, so I ended up needing to have a second X session on the 3rd screen.
2: The 3rd screen constantly gets artifacts on it
3: Mouse cursor often gets stuck and I have to reboot, I lose keyboard and the cursor can move but it's stuck in the hand icon. I've been told it could be a video card issue.
4: nouveau driver is unusable for that card (this means any live CD as well). Screens flicker every second, unusable without literally going insane.
And many many other issues possibly related to the video card/driver.
So I've had it, time for a new video card. New Video card will also mean different drivers. Idealy I'd like a video card that will support 3 monitors, so I don't have to get two of em. I want to eliminate having 2 video cards, to rule out issues. Needs to be something known to work well in Linux. Can someone make a recommendation?