Chris Mocock wrote: > > Can't help you, sorry, but you might find the wikipedia article > interesting: > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_GMA#GMA_500 > > To quote "Rather than being developed in-house, this core is a PowerVR > SGX 535 core licensed from Imagination Technologies. Since PowerVR is > not cooperative with the open source movement, this has resulted in > the dependence on outdated closed source Linux drivers." > Chris, the situation appears to be changing. See this article just published at Phoronix: Is An Open-Source Poulsbo Driver Coming? Posted by Michael Larabel on November 01, 2009 Intel's Poulsbo Linux driver is a bloody mess. The Poulsbo chipset is known commercially as the GMA 500 that's found in many netbooks as of late, but it isn't actually an Intel design but the graphics processor design was licensed from PowerVR. With that, there is no open-source driver but just an ill-maintained binary blob that is notorious among Poulsbo customers. The Poulsbo DRM, which is open-source but without any open-source client (driver), was previously rejected from entering the mainline kernel as well. The situation for Intel's GMA 500 on Linux is not good, but could this soon be changing? We were tipped off this weekend that on YouTube are two videos (shown below) courtesy of the German NetbookNews.de that shows off Quake III Arena running in full HD on a Poulsbo netbook and a full 1080p HD film running off another Moblin-powered netbook. To sum up the video descriptions for those less experienced in German, Martin Mohring of the Linux Foundation was showing off Quake III Arena at 1080p on an Intel Atom Z-series netbook with a GMA500 graphics solution using "special drivers" that will come with Intel's Moorestown platform. This game was running at about 35~40 FPS with this Moblin system. The HD video sample was done on another Poulsbo netbook with a Z-Series Atom under Moblin, again using these "special drivers" for Moorestown. These videos were recorded at MobileDevCamp09. Unless there was just too much (wonderful) Augustiner being drunk at this development camp in Munich, this would leave us to understand that there is some sort of new driver for the Intel Poulsbo coming out for Linux with Moorestown. For those not up on codenames, Moorestown is the successor to Intel's Menlow platform, which will launch late this year or early next year. New Linux drivers that run fast are one thing, but if the Linux Foundation is showing off this "special driver", we have to wonder if this Poulsbo driver will be open-source. If not, what is the Linux Foundation doing showing off binary blobs on Moblin? Only time will tell. http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=NzY2MA See also the follow-up from a day later: Intel's Special Driver For Poulsbo Uses Gallium3D http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=NzY2Mg ----- Colin Brace Amsterdam http://lim.nl -- View this message in context: http://old.nabble.com/Intel-GMA-500-problems-on-Eee-tp26087610p26192711.html Sent from the Fedora List mailing list archive at Nabble.com. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines