It wasn't a so big problem THEN - all i did was download a new kernel RPM from the ndiswrapper side with 8k stacks disabled. *pof* nVidia! But this udev stuff would be worse to work around... => my main machine will stay on fc2 untill nvidia drivers work with fc3. BTW pissing off nvidia isn't such a good idea either. Not that i oppose udev, but you get the idea. Please not break the drivers for fun. Not that i think you do. Kyrre fre, 01.10.2004 kl. 00.20 skrev Carlos Rodrigues: > Malita, Florin wrote: > > On Thu, 2004-09-30 at 16:25, Enrico Scholz wrote: > > > >>documentation and/or diagnostic. And btw... the nvidia driver are not > >>supported by FC ;) > > > > > > Not sure what you mean by "supported" but > > NVIDIA-Linux-x86-1.0-5336-pkg1 works perfectly fine with FC2 for me... > > > > Also that "not supported" thing is crap. Binary modules are a fact of > life and some care ("some" meaning "break it if you have to, but avoid > it if you can") must be taken so that users can use them. > > The fact is that nvidia cards are _very_ popular and users want to have > them working properly on linux. In fact they don't have much options, > ATi drivers suck beyond reason and other cards are just plain > insufficient preformance-wise. So, if the nvidia driver breaks and isn't > easy to fix, that will just drive users away. Take me for an example, I > have always updated to a newer Red Hat version (since Red Hat 5.0) > whithin 1.5 weeks of release, but it took me around 2 months to step up > to Fedora 2. Why? Because the nvidia drivers didn't work with the fedora > 2 kernel and I have better things to do with my time that patching and > rebuilding kernels. When nvidia released new drivers I upgraded within 1 > week. If I were a new user, I wouldn't even have bothered. > > Carlos Rodrigues