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Differences between current version and revision by previous author of BinaryDriver.

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Newer page: version 8 Last edited on Sunday, May 28, 2006 12:47:42 pm by AristotlePagaltzis
Older page: version 6 Last edited on Sunday, November 14, 2004 8:23:14 pm by PeterHewett Revert
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
-A Device driver that doesn't come with source. [ BinaryDriver] s are often used by companies that think that giving out the source to their driver gives away too much about how their hardware works. Of course because they are compiled separately to the kernel, they tend to be bound to specific versions of the kernel, and you have to wait for new versions of your driver to be available before you can upgrade. 
+A DeviceDriver that doesn't come with source. BinaryDriver~ s are often used by companies that think that giving out the source to their driver gives away too much about how their hardware works. Of course because they are compiled separately to the kernel, they tend to be bound to specific versions of the kernel, and you have to wait for new versions of your driver to be available before you can upgrade. 
  
-All in all, [ BinaryDriver] s suck. :) 
+All in all, BinaryDriver~ s suck. :) 
  
-In the Linux world, one well-known example is [nVidia|http://www.nvidia.com/]'s binary NvidiaDriver [Kernel] [Module] for their accelerated graphics cards. While it is understandable that they don't want their competitors benefitting from their (purportedly highly optimised) graphics driver routines, it also means the Linux community could not fix any of the inevitable (and often system stability jeopardizing) bugs in these drivers. Indeed, issues relating to ClosedSource drivers were so common that the Linux kernel folks added a "taint" flag that indicates whether any of the loaded [Kernel] [Module]s are released under a non-free license (which [ BinaryDriver] s necessarily are). They refuse to even look at any issues encountered while running a tainted kernel. 
+In the Linux world, one well-known example is [nVidia | http://www.nvidia.com/]'s binary [Kernel] [Module] for their accelerated graphics cards. While it is understandable that they don't want their competitors benefitting from their (purportedly highly optimised) graphics driver routines, it also means the Linux community could not fix any of the inevitable (and often system stability jeopardizing) bugs in these drivers. Indeed, issues relating to ClosedSource drivers were so common that the Linux kernel folks added a "taint" flag that indicates whether any of the loaded [Kernel] [Module]s are released under a non-free license (which BinaryDriver~ s necessarily are). They refuse to even look at any issues encountered while running a tainted kernel.