Which specific “Nvidia business” are you referring to @serutan?
Each option, whether it’s Nvidia, AMD or Intel, has its pros and cons.
AMD for example, has fully open source drivers, but (as such) can’t support HDMI 2.1 (or higher) spec. Not all displays, TV’s in particular, support DisplayPort which is otherwise a good alternative. At a glance though, there may be some hacky advancements there:
Intel in my opinion doesn’t yet have maturity and an established position in the mid to high-end GPU market. My caution would be that when compared to the alternative, they are much more likely to simply drop the product line and support for it, altogether. I hope for competition sake though, that doesn’t happen.
Nvidia provide CUDA technology, which is great for productivity tasks, but less important for gamers. For professional use cases, I’d be hard pressed to walk past that. The kernel module is now open-source, but there is still a closed source part of the drivers, which is both a good and a bad thing. The bad being, well, it’s closed so it remains something of a mystery, but the good is that it permits HDMI 2.1 support, unlike AMD.