There doesn’t seem to be any Edge version for 22.x, so I guess I’m using the normal one.
The thing with my refresh rate is that the highest one available to me is just 60 Hz. I’m using a Huawei Matebook X Pro (2018) and if I’m not mistaken, its display should have 90 Hz at a resolution of 3.000x2.000 (yep, it’s display is somewhat uncommon and has a 3:2 format). I’ve noticed because since the switch, the screen looked very choppy to me.
You could try installing the newest kernel. Mint apparently comes with a great built-in tool to do so.
It might contain newer drivers that fix your issues. I also see there’s a variant with Nvidia GPU… in that case it also might be Nvidias fault. Which would be not surprising at all. (Mint got a driver utility you could meddle with).
I switched to the newest Kernel version and sadly the problem still persists. :(
Yep, I have the variant with a Nvidia GPU and I also think that it’s highly likely that they fucked up. I’ve already noticed that I don’t see a lot of settings in the Nvidia server settings app where other people seem to have way more options than me.
Perhaps the nvidia driver doesn’t load correctly. Could you open a terminal, enter lspci -nnk and look for your GPU in the list to check if the kernel driver in use says “nvidia” and/or “nvidia_drm”?
There doesn’t seem to be any Edge version for 22.x, so I guess I’m using the normal one.
The thing with my refresh rate is that the highest one available to me is just 60 Hz. I’m using a Huawei Matebook X Pro (2018) and if I’m not mistaken, its display should have 90 Hz at a resolution of 3.000x2.000 (yep, it’s display is somewhat uncommon and has a 3:2 format). I’ve noticed because since the switch, the screen looked very choppy to me.
You could try installing the newest kernel. Mint apparently comes with a great built-in tool to do so. It might contain newer drivers that fix your issues. I also see there’s a variant with Nvidia GPU… in that case it also might be Nvidias fault. Which would be not surprising at all. (Mint got a driver utility you could meddle with).
I switched to the newest Kernel version and sadly the problem still persists. :(
Yep, I have the variant with a Nvidia GPU and I also think that it’s highly likely that they fucked up. I’ve already noticed that I don’t see a lot of settings in the Nvidia server settings app where other people seem to have way more options than me.
Perhaps the nvidia driver doesn’t load correctly. Could you open a terminal, enter lspci -nnk and look for your GPU in the list to check if the kernel driver in use says “nvidia” and/or “nvidia_drm”?