On Fri, 2017-09-29 at 15:36 +0200, Morten W. Petersen wrote:
On Fri, Sep 29, 2017 at 11:47 AM, Laurent Rineau
<laurent.rineau__fedora(a)normalesup.org> wrote:
> Le Friday, September 29, 2017 3:32:10 AM CEST Steven Haigh a écrit :
> > On Friday, 29 September 2017 9:58:14 AM AEST Ed Greshko wrote:
> > > On 09/29/17 03:18, Morten W. Petersen wrote:
> > > > I recently decided to try out Fedora, and installed it on my desktop
> > > > computer. It has multiple sound cards, and I blogged about the
> > > > process here:
> > > >
> > > >
http://blogologue.com/frames?url=http://blogologue.com/blog_entry?id=15
> > > > 061
> > > > 68845X29
> > > >
> > > > Today I looked around in the system settings menu, and found that I
> > > > could set the preferred sound device there.
> > > >
> > > > Wouldn't it be a bit easier for a novice user to configure the
> > > > preferred sound device from the sound panel in the taskbar? At
least
> > > > to begin with.
> > > >
> > > > And sound settings is easier to understand than
"multimedia".
> > >
> > > If you must use nVidia drivers there is a much easier way to do it than
> > > you write about in your blog. The fine folks over at RPMfusion have
> > > made it as simply enabling their repositories and typing "dnf
install
> > > akmod-nvidia" for all the newer generation cards.
> >
> > Are the RPMFusion drivers still way behind?
>
> They are. That is why I would recommand, nowdays, to use the Negativo
> repositories. The commands to use are described here:
>
>
https://negativo17.org/nvidia-driver/
Well is this splintering of NVIDIA driver maintenance something that has
some good reasons or is it simply something like technical purism?
I saw something about 96 DPI in the configuration section of
negativo17.org
but didn't quite get what that was about.