622 Part IV (Web site domain) . Running Applications it s probably
622 Part IV . Running Applications it s probably easiest to start with games that are ready to run. The following list provides information about where to find out about games packaged for different Linux distributions: . Red Hat (Fedora and RHEL) To look beyond your desktop menu for games, try the Fedora Extras games list at http://fedoraproject.org/extras/4/ i386/repodata/repoview/games.group.html . Debian Debian games resources are listed at the DebianLinux.Net wiki. Visit the games section at http://debianlinux.net/games. . Gentoo Games packaged for Gentoo are sorted into a variety of game categories, such as games-sports, games-strategy, games-simulation, and so on. Visit http://packages.gentoo.org/categories to select the category of game that interests you to look for particular game pages that run in Gentoo. . Slackware While GNOME and KDE games run fine in Slackware, not a lot of gaming resources are particular to Slackware. However, because Slackware contains a solid set of libraries and development tools, many open source games will compile and run in Slackware if you are willing to get the source code for the game you want and build it yourself. Choosing a Video Card for Gaming Because 3D games place extraordinary demands on your video hardware, choosing a good video card and configuring it properly is one of the keys to ensuring a good gaming experience. For advanced gaming, you need to go beyond what a basic 64-bit card can do for you. Binary-only Video Card Drivers Most serious Linux gamers have either an NVIDIA or ATI card, so that s the short answer to starting out with serious Linux gaming. Although open source drivers are available from most NVIDIA and ATI cards, those drivers do not support 3D hardware acceleration. While that s fine for most desktop applications, for gaming you want to get the binary-only drivers for those cards from the following locations: . NVIDIA To get NVIDIA drivers that run in Linux, go to the Unix Drivers Portal Page (www.nvidia.com/object/unix.html). . ATI To find Linux drivers for ATI video cards, visit the ATI support Knowledge Base page that describes Linux drivers at http://support.ati. com/ics/support/KBAnswer.asp?questionID=3380. When you go to get a binary-only video driver, be sure that you know not only the video card model you are using, but also the name and version of your X server (XFree86 used to be the most popular, but many of the biggest Linux distributions
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