Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 21st Feb 2013 20:48 UTC
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Intel GPUs have notoriously terrible Linux drivers
It has been getting better and better ever since Chris Wilson started working on it ~3 years ago. He is the guy who almost single-handedly makes Intel GPUs viable on Linux:
http://cgit.freedesktop.org/xorg/driver/xf86-video-intel/log/




Member since:
2011-04-11
There isn't a market for 21:9 (or 18:9), just an ultra-small niche (as Philips found out after they failed to push their 21:9 TVs in significant quantities). Photos and 4:3 content look awful in 21:9. You know how it goes, photos and 4:3 on a 16:9 screen is tolerable, but photos and 4:3 on 21:9 is ridiculous.
Essentially, with 4:3, 16:9 and 21:9 content being all in the daily menu of most users (where "content" means movies and photos), 16:9 is the safest choice for consumer hardware, because it sits somewhere in the middle, so black bars (horizontal of vertical) will never be too thick.
Of course, if you want hardware for productivity, good luck finding a 4:3 laptop. A niche market for this Chromebook Pixel? (after you install a real OS in it of course)
Clearly this is a high end laptop for people who want to put linux on their machines. That's really the only point I see for it.
Thought about that too, then I saw the Intel GPU. Intel GPUs have notoriously terrible Linux drivers (not that the Windows ones are a pinnacle of software quality, but at least they mostly work). In fact, THE most interesting thing about this laptop is the drivers Google will use to drive the GPU. Remember, this is an integrated product, so Google cannot say "sorry for the bugs, tee hee", so it will be interesting to see how they plan to work around the problem that is the Intel GPU. They could turn off the acceleraton, but there is Web GL stuff they need to support. And H.264 acceleration.
Edited 2013-02-22 15:33 UTC