<html><head><style type="text/css"><!-- DIV {margin:0px;} --></style></head><body><div style="font-family:times new roman, new york, times, serif;font-size:12pt"><div style="font-family: times new roman,new york,times,serif; font-size: 12pt;">Well, what do you have connected as a monitor? It's possible that you have a problem with the connection. I know that when I hooked my monitor up to DVI, I had to play games with the config to get the resolutions to work out right. There were options that were necessary to get frequencies to work right with my wide screen BW205.<br><br>Cheers!<br><br>Bob<br><br><div style="font-family: times new roman,new york,times,serif; font-size: 12pt;">----- Original Message ----<br>From: Stephen Burke <qfwfq@roadrunner.com><br>To: nflug@nflug.org<br>Sent: Wednesday, August 15, 2007 3:37:33 PM<br>Subject: Re: [nflug] Fedora 7 Review<br><br><div>Kevin E. Glosser wrote:<br>> As I tried to relay in my
review, sometimes there is compromise when <br>> using Fedora. Make no mistake, Ubuntu is not without it's own issues. <br>> There are consequences to their approach as well. I've seen them first <br>> hand. My brother uses Ubuntu, and I've had to help him fix issues <br>> specifically related to delays resulting in the Ubuntu project upgrading <br>> very slowly.<br>> <br>> I specifically remember my brother wanting to use Compiz/Beryl a while <br>> ago and he couldn't. He couldn't because he was using Ubuntu's packaged <br>> NVIDIA driver. That's fine and dandy, but Ubuntu was very slow in <br>> updating their package. NVIDIA released a new driver and it took a very <br>> long time for Ubuntu to release it. That driver was required for <br>> Compiz/Beryl to work with the hardware my brother had. He had two <br>> choices, sit and wait or go out on his own and install the latest NVIDIA <br>> driver
manually.<br><br>I was hoping this conversation might eventually get around to NVIDIA <br>issues in fedora. Ever since fedora 5 or so, I've had nothing but <br>trouble with the nvidia card in this computer. I keep hoping the NEXT <br>version of fedora might fix things but so far it hasn't. I grabbed <br>fedora 7 recently full of hope and got nowhere with it. Every time, X <br>fails to start when it can't find a monitor attached to the motherboard <br>video card, which seems trully strange when the signal has to go through <br>the nvidia card for me to even see X failing. Actually, I prefer BLAG, <br>which (I think) strips out much the the bloat mentioned previously in <br>this thread, but I get the same X problems there, so I'm thinking it's a <br>fedora thing.<br><br>The card in question is this one:<br>$ lspci<br>00:0a.0 VGA compatible controller: nVidia Corporation NV18 [GeForce4 MX <br>4000 AGP 8x] (rev c1)<br><br>I realize it's kind of old by now,
and was pretty cheap to begin with, <br>but wtf? Fedora is really the only distro I've seen this with.<br><br>Any ideas? Boot options that might get me around it?<br><br>Thanks,<br>S.<br><br>_______________________________________________<br>nflug mailing list<br>nflug@nflug.org<br><a target="_blank" href="http://www.nflug.org/mailman/listinfo/nflug">http://www.nflug.org/mailman/listinfo/nflug</a><br></div></div><br></div></div><br>
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