安裝 Steam
登入
|
語言
簡體中文
日本語(日文)
한국어(韓文)
ไทย(泰文)
Български(保加利亞文)
Čeština(捷克文)
Dansk(丹麥文)
Deutsch(德文)
English(英文)
Español - España(西班牙文 - 西班牙)
Español - Latinoamérica(西班牙文 - 拉丁美洲)
Ελληνικά(希臘文)
Français(法文)
Italiano(義大利文)
Bahasa Indonesia(印尼語)
Magyar(匈牙利文)
Nederlands(荷蘭文)
Norsk(挪威文)
Polski(波蘭文)
Português(葡萄牙文 - 葡萄牙)
Português - Brasil(葡萄牙文 - 巴西)
Română(羅馬尼亞文)
Русский(俄文)
Suomi(芬蘭文)
Svenska(瑞典文)
Türkçe(土耳其文)
tiếng Việt(越南文)
Українська(烏克蘭文)
回報翻譯問題
Anyway, judging by the message i get, I don't think that is the problem. It is asking me to update to nvidia-experimental-310, which doesn't support my card. The complete message text is:
It's probably rather tricky to check the model series because they'd have to grab a part of the string "NVIDIA Corporation GeForce 7300 LE/PCIe/SSE2" and check if it's 8000 or newer. But 500 is also newer than 7000 ^^. So they would have to keep a list of every possible NVIDIA Model that can't update to 310 anyway. And there are a lot of different models for every series. When nvidia updates their legacy branch sometime hopefully, all of that was in vain.
The driver version you can see in the System Information window is clearly obtained through whatever call OpenGL has to get that info, as it spills the same string as the one you get with glxinfo. But the message I was getting had packages names and versions, not driver versions.
Also to find out your model I saw after the 1st post that they are already gathering the meaningful information: Vendor and Device IDs. If they aim to support other distros they will probably have to use that, if they aren't already using it. Nvidia has a list of supported devices with their IDs in the README.txt of every release, including lists for legacy branches, in a format that looks easy to parse. And if needed I'm sure they can get that list in any common format directly from nvidia. No idea about AMD, but I guess they can get that list easy too. And Intel.