Most Linux-based* distributions already include Intel Graphics Drivers. These drivers are provided and maintained by the Linux* distribution vendors and not by Intel, we recommend contacting the Linux* Operating System Vendors.
intel g33 g31 driver ubuntu
My last computer ended with a burning smell when I was trying to install more memory. My Samsung SSD is up-to-date with 18.04 Ubuntu. I put it into another used computer which has a G33/G31 Express Integrated Graphics Controller. Ubuntu is working fine, except that it hangs up at the splash screen during boot-up, and I need to boot-up every time from the GRUB menu. Also the screen resolution is not right. The terminal says "unable to get EDID for xrandr-default: unable to get EDID for output". Intel no longer supports the G33/G31 drivers for Ubuntu. Regarding updates for this driver, their website says "Users may be unable to use the native resolution of some displays when using Intel chipset graphics." "The display EDID is not read properly when connecting to a subset of Digital Flat Panel (DFP) displays." "Intel has released this driver to specifically address this issue . . ." Unfortunately, the updated driver is only for Windows. I bought the computer for $200 and have spent at least 40 hours trying to find answers. Did I waste my time and money? Can I fix it, or should I just buy a new computer? There may be other issues that I do not know about, but the computer seems to work fine, except the graphics are not right. If I run lshw in the terminal, it says "*-display UNCLAIMED". When I opened "Activities" and typed in "Displays", the resolution I needed(1280 X 1024) was not listed. Thank you :)
Dear Intel Community,I notice artifacts for my GPU - Intel G31/G33 after Ubuntu 20.04.2.0 installation. I used Mesa graphic driver. I don't know what version it is was but I returned back to Windows 7 OS and now I still have these artifacts. I used Ubuntu 20.04.2.0 with liveUSB because I wanted recovery some files from my secondary hard drive.This was coincidence or this was real chance that Ubuntu 20.04.2.0 operating system could destroy my hardware (GPU)? Can you tell me?I didn't changed any settings in BIOS but I readed that maybe solution can be drop frequency of the GPU. How I can do this?I hope that someone can help. I really want to get help because I still use this old computer.
- CPU: Intel Core 2 Quad Q8200After installing Ubuntu 20.04.2 I noticed artifacts like I said. Is it a option that GPU was damaged because problem with the buggy linux driver?What person from Intel Community have knowledge about old drivers and firmware for Intel G31? Can you tell me? If someone from community can help please answer me. I will very apreciate for this.
@n_scott_pearson thank you for your answer. I think that RAM is good because before I used Ubuntu 20.04 my machine worked fine. I also noticed that these artifacts are visable randomly. This is not on all time in my screen. This looks strange. On BIOS I didn't see these artifacts. Is this possible that linux driver change something in firmware of my GPU? If yes, how I can restore it to default?
@n_scott_pearson thank you very much for your answer. This graphic card Intel G31 is located on the motherboard, not in the processor. So the firmware for this GPU is included in BIOS of the motherboard or in the processor? Maybe linux updated microcode because Ubuntu 20.04 is new system but I didn't download update for Ubuntu OS. I returned quickly to Windows 7 OS because I believed that this is problem with Ubuntu and still I think that this OS could did something wrong with my machine. Is it option that drivers for my GPU in Ubuntu make someting wrong with firmware? If not maybe this did for example too high frequency or something similar and now I have problems?If I will reflash BIOS of the motherboard this will reset firmware of the GPU? If firmware is located in BIOS on the motherboard? Or GPU have own BIOS and this is not BIOS of the motherboard? Do you know?
Sorry, I was lumping the two (processor and chipset) together for brevity. The driver for the GMCH may load some firmware, but this would only be temporary and gone once a hard power cycle occurs. Installing a BIOS update may include a more-permanent version of the firmware (the "Video BIOS") but no O/S should be able to affect this in any permanent way (though BIOS and especially Firmware Hub security back then was not as good). You can certainly try updating (or re-updating) the BIOS to the latest available version.
I think that is not damaged RAM or GPU. It looks like bug because only some interface of Windows 7 looks like artifacts. When I play videos on full screen for example I don't have any artifacts. Very strange behaviour and this looks like microcode or driver are buggy now after trying Ubuntu.
Open a terminal window by pressing Ctrl+Alt+T. Now, to install the latest drivers, add the graphics package repository by executing the following commands, it will install gpg-agent and get and will install the public key required to verify the integrity of the package.
hi, I have install ubuntu 13.04 32-bit. I wanted to install grphic driver. but intel linux manager, cannot recognize my graphic card and arrise an error that says you have not intel graphic card!!!I have a netbook Sumsung N100 (intel GMA3150)What should I do?thanks advance
Since the nightmare crash between Xorg and Intel graphic card on Ubuntu Jaunty, now you have a good news. You can update your Intel driver to the latest update to this great hardware acceleration for playing h.264 video. Or in other words we now have Hardware acceleration for HD content with our Intel video cards. And as the new video standard on the HTML 5, h.264 video format will be used.
Thanks for the guide. You might want to add instructions on how to revert the changes and downgrade back to the default Intel drivers should the latest intel drivers result in system instability ( which I experienced alot when i tried it) The user would need to install a package called ppa-purge
I'm wondering how to fix this =/ (Another computer, also running Ubuntu 10.04, never had any problems with the internet and connects just fine to the network and to the internet. I didn't change the driver on that computer.)
then open synaptics and search2.6.37-graphics2+12.26maverickthen reboot and start whit this kernel and my problem with incompatibility of compiz and intel graphics end and my system works excellent and without freezes.
Hi Ivan, I need help with this please. I have Ubuntu 12.04 now and the video card I have is Intel G33 x86/MMX/SSE2. Would this tutorial still work if I try it on my pc? I can't find anything on the internet and the intel website says I have to go to this other website to update the drivers, but there is no guide on how to do it I'm clueless now. What should I do?Please help. Thanks in advance.
I was wondering if there is any other way to run the AVD ? im trying to run in with android studio ( to start some flutter course) but i cant open it at all i was having some HAXM problems first but seems to be fixed ... now when i press the .> icon in AVD manager from android studio i get this GPU driver issue .. i understand it prob about some driver ofc (which i think is because i have no video card installed in my computer or bettter said im only using onboard video card ) please if someone could help me or tell me if there is another way to open the AVD android phone screen, -i have uploaded a picture from the error here i hope it appears in the question -
Google Chrome 88 (and newer) has made hardware accelerated video decoding available on Linux, but it's not enabled by default. Google Chrome is not the only Chromium-based web browser to support hardware acceleration on Linux though. This article explains how to enable hardware-accelerated video decoding in Google Chrome, Brave, Vivaldi and Opera web browsers running on Debian, Ubuntu, Pop!_OS or Linux Mint (Xorg only).Using hardware-accelerated video decode in your web browser should result in using less CPU usage (and thus, less battery draining) when playing online videos.It's worth noting that Chromium web browser had patches that allowed making hardware accelerated video decoding available on Linux for some time, and some Linux distributions packaged it using those patches. So Chromium users have had hardware acceleration on Linux for some time, depending on their Linux distribution or if they installed the patched Chromium in some other way. E.g. on Ubuntu / Linux Mint there's a PPA with VA-API patched Chromium builds. Thus, these instructions may also work for Chromium browser, depending on how it's built.I'd also like to add that these instructions to enable hardware accelerated video decoding also work on other Linux distributions, and not just Debian / Ubuntu-based Linux distributions, however, the driver names are different.I tested these instructions using Ubuntu 20.10 desktop with Nvidia graphics, and the web browsers listed below installed using their original Ubuntu packaging (using a DEB package). Also tested using a laptop with Intel graphics (10th gen) on Ubuntu 20.04 and 20.10. I don't own a device with AMD graphics to test this.In my test, I was able to get hardware-accelerated video decode to work on Linux using:Google Chrome stable 88Brave stable 1.19Vivaldi snapshot 3.6 / [Edit] The latest Vivaldi stable 3.6 also worksOpera Beta 74if(typeof ez_ad_units!='undefined')ez_ad_units.push([[336,280],'linuxuprising_com-medrectangle-4','ezslot_6',115,'0','0']);__ez_fad_position('div-gpt-ad-linuxuprising_com-medrectangle-4-0');Obviously, it should continue to work with versions newer than these (so Google Chrome 89, Brave 1.20, etc.).For me, hardware-accelerated video decode didn't work using:Vivaldi stable 3.5. Vivaldi stable is now version 36, and that does have working hardware-accelerated video decodingOpera stable 73Microsoft Edge - there's not even a chrome://flags/#enable-accelerated-video-decode flag (to enable hardware-accelerated video decode).You can use VA-API on XWayland, using the --use-gl=egl command line flag, but I did not try it. Starting with Google Chrome 91 (and other browsers based on Chromium 91), you'll also need to append the --enable-features=VaapiVideoDecoder and --disable-features=UseChromeOSDirectVideoDecoder flags.[[Edit]] I've tried using the instructions below, and then launch the browser with the --use-gl=egl and --disable-features=UseChromeOSDirectVideoDecoder flags on Wayland, on a laptop with Intel graphics, and hardware-accelerated video playback works. However, the videos stutter on this laptop with these settings. So in this case I prefer Firefox with hardware-accelerated video playback (on which, using Wayland and Firefox on the same laptop, video playback is fluid, but the CPU usage is greater than using a Chromium-based browser). 2ff7e9595c
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