Hatta wrote:The GeForce4 MX 4000 is supported by the nVidia legacy driver 96.43.xx. There's a list of GPUs and legacy drivers
here. Get the driver itself
here.
I recommend using the nVidia installer. Remove everything nVidia related from your package manager. Then quit X, change to root, and run 'sh NVIDIA-Linux-x86-96.43.18.pkg1.run. When it's done and you start X again, you should have 3d acceleration. Test it by running 'glxinfo' in a console and look for "Direct Rendering: Yes". Configure the driver by running 'nvidia-settings'.
For a new Linux user, I have to recommend
this read. Also, if you want to get up and running with some 8 bit emulators right away, check out mednafen.
I tried to get the driver, It refuses to install. I tried command line in terminal and I tried just double clicking it. All I keep getting is character format errors.
I checked out the Linux is not Windows thing and while I understand here it's coming from, it's not really as accurate as they think it is. Nowadays Linux has hit the mainstream as a viable option for general computing use thanks to how simple the GUI is with Ubuntu and other graphical versions. Not making stuff simple as dirt is not an option anymore for graphical versions. Also, thee whole windows not in the driver's seat thing is a crock, I can literally rip apart Windows and change it up myself no sweat, mainly because it's designed all around efficiency from a user customizable level. Linux is meant for servers and one man shows but can be created into a nice GUI driven OS, it just needs to leave the adolescent forced difficulty behind and step up to the plate.
Also, not wanting to emulate, I've got a wall of consoles behind me as I type.
