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- Linaro reveal they're collaborating with Valve for the Steam Frame
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Anyone have any advice on how to install the drivers? I have 358.16 downloaded, but can't install with X running.
1) Reboot PC and enter "recovery" mode
2) Remove all NVidia drivers ( Used to use sudo apt-get purge nvidia-current, but sometimes you need to remove the specific driver aka nvidia-311 or whatever you have at that time )
3) Re-install NVidia drivers ( Check what the latest driver should be from the official repo and install that version sudo apt-get install nvidia-358 )
However, I've noticed that after my last driver update I did this way I no longer need to use command line as my Ubuntu is set to weekly update and I saw on Monday that the drivers now install along with other updates.
The Additional Drivers thing never worked 100% for me. I always had to first reboot to recovery mode, remove all nvidia drivers, then reboot (MESA drivers should then kick in) and then when in Ubuntu use Additional Drivers. However I used the above method with better success.
Hope that helps.
View PC info
now depending what distro you have (according to your profile, its linux mint).
find additional drivers(or something like that) and install via that
or if your distro doesnt have enough up to date ones then grab a PPA for newer drivers
Arrhhggg! I forgot about recovery mode. Didn't even think about doing that.
Edit: Manjaro installed and everything working as it should, remind me to never change major GPU brands again :P
Edit 2: Tried Metro Redux 0_0 I've never seen anything look that good run that smooth.
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:xorg-edgers/ppasudo apt-get updateapt-cache search "NVIDIA binary driver"And then install whichever driver you wish. It's always worked for me. If you do install the driver from nVidia, make sure you have dkms installed, so you can safely update the kernel without having to reinstall the driver.
That PPA doesn't have the newest drivers immediately, nor, of course, the beta drivers, but they aren't that far behind either, and when a new driver comes out, a simple apt-get upgrade command will do the trick.
View PC info
-kernel updates usually break this
-you have to keep eye on it to update on time of kernel/xserver updates
-on 64bit system 32bit libs were missing after website driver install (happened on mint and arch, havent tried other distros)
-have to turn off xserver to install drivers
those have been the issues.. using drivers from repo is always painfree
Use the official PPA https://launchpad.net/~graphics-drivers/+archive/ubuntu/ppa
On every system I tried to boot I had problems, Cinnamon would automatically go to software rendering ( in a live environment ), and other distros wouldn't even load a desktop. Manjaro on the other hand would, as it had the option to boot with Nvidia's drivers.
It took me two hours this morning to jump back and forth between my Mint install and my Mint live disk to get some .deb packages copied to my main system's apt cache as I couldn't get a connection with my wireless card (another problem, couldn't figure out how to use ndiswrapper without a GUI :P ) Finally got a software rendered desktop in Mint on my hard drive and was able to get proprietary drivers installed.
I got it though, and now time to play Shadow of Mordor on ultra high :D
I think this sufficiently explains this though: ;)