this post was submitted on 15 May 2025
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It does have it's own power button. When shutting down, the monitor does stay on for a few seconds with the 'no signal' message, but then turns off (the LED power indicator goes from blue to orange).
I don't have another computer to test it with at the moment.
I can try booting with just the software rendering, but I'm not sure how to do this in Fedora. In Pop os, there were options under the power menu to choose graphics settings. Fedora seems to handle this automatically(?)
Here's how to disable the GPU drivers:
Remove “nomodeset” from the GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX variable in /etc/default/grub
Add “rd.driver.blacklist=nouveau modprobe.blacklist=nouveau” to GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX instead
Run
sudo update-grub
then rebootNote: This only works if you're using the open-source drivers, known as Nouveau. If you're using the proprietary drivers, this will not work.
To check if you're using Nouveau or the proprietary drivers, run
lspci
and check for "NVIDIA", then runlsmod
and check for Nouveau.Remember to change it back when you want to re-enable the NVIDIA drivers.
(PS: I used this website as a source, their procedure is more complicated.)