Comment by giancarlostoro

2 hours ago

Can it work with Linux? That's all I care about.

I don't think there's any incentive for Nvidia to make this a Windows-only device, so most likely it will be fully supported on Linux, just like their GPUs are.

  • > just like their GPUs are

    So with proprietary blobs that give you more trouble that they're worth?

Honestly this looks like Microsoft must have thrown a pile of money at them to not mention it, as it's just too obviously the main question.

No one seriously cares about this running Windows. We want Steam and CUDA/Ollama, and Windows just gets in the way. nVidia are simply not that oblivious, but I have to admit in their position I'd have considered the Microsoft involvement more trouble than it's worth, which is among the many reasons I'm not a billionaire.

Maybe they think the RAM market is so terrible it will kill the whole initiative regardless.

  • WSL is the answer in what most folks are concerned.

    Has Steam finally started to push for native Linux games instead of translating Windows ones?

    • Valve did that little more than a decade ago, the original Steam Machines. It didn't take, and despite the success of the Deck and current techy trends, Linux does not have the % to make the ROI worthwhile if it isn't simple for developers. Proton is a wedge in the door that will help Linux get there.

Sort of. It's the same chipset as in the DGX Spark & DGX Station, which run Ubuntu (NVIDIA's flavor).

DGX Spark comes with linux out of the box, it would be hard to imagine this device is not also compatible

  • Doesn't it come with Nvidia's blend of Ubuntu with a custom kernel? Do other distros work as well as "DGX OS" or are nvidia's kernel changes pretty important to have?

    • I've not noticed much in it that is NVIDIA specific.

      But I would say that as an Ubuntu and Debian user for decades I have no incentive to use anything else on it and I'm just pleased to have a Linux on Aarch64 machine that is well supported for a change.

This is strangely absent from the news.

  • There are two new things being announced here: the GB10 chip being put into laptops, and GB10 running Windows. GB10 running Linux is not news, it's a product that's been shipping since last fall.