Good for you. I have the worst Linux experience in 20 years, because I was tempted to buy a high-end laptop that happened to have a nVidia graphics card (ThinkPad X1E). Never ever will I touch hardware with nVidia. Certainly, I might not be the target audience for this - I don't play games and work mostly in a terminal and browser.
Once I managed to make it work, and that I am now able to select between the NVidia and Intel - I have to tell, that I do not see any difference, in performance. However the performance is below what I was used on the previous computers - it might be due to the high resolution (3840x2160).
Connecting external monitors is a nightmare. It produces a lot of heat. And it made me lose so much time! In this case I do not even care about proprietary or open source drivers - I just want it to work.
I never had a more sluggish linux system since 1995. Even typing in the browser or in the terminal makes me make mistakes, so much lag is there.
Once I managed to make it work, and that I am now able to select between the NVidia and Intel - I have to tell, that I do not see any difference, in performance. However the performance is below what I was used on the previous computers - it might be due to the high resolution (3840x2160).
Connecting external monitors is a nightmare. It produces a lot of heat. And it made me lose so much time! In this case I do not even care about proprietary or open source drivers - I just want it to work.
I never had a more sluggish linux system since 1995. Even typing in the browser or in the terminal makes me make mistakes, so much lag is there.