On Wed, 2007-01-17 at 22:49 +0900, Joseph Sanger wrote: > http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic-t-473838.html > > What do you think?
I don't think that makes sense. The higher the applied voltage is, the more twisted the crystals become and the pixel is black. So how can a white display have any adverse effect when that means that there is no voltage on the pixels? To me, the other explanation (backlight on, lcd off) makes more sense because I imagine that if you turn off the lcd then it'll stop refreshing and start losing voltage in the pixels meaning it'll slowly go to white, probably from the edges to the center since the electrons have to flow out the edges... The cite you linked is actually taken from http://tstotts.net/linux/gentoopb.html but that has no explanation of what should cause this "process of frying the video card and panel permanently!" But keep in mind that I don't have any idea about electronics. Maybe we should bring this question to someone more knowledgeable. > BTW I forgot to mention, it sometimes happens on boot as well (maybe 1 > in 10?). Once it happened just before the penguin appears at the top of > the screen, but usually just before the debian login window. The first instance is when the kernel driver initialises the panel, and the second when X starts up, so those points clearly make sense. I haven't seen the effect in a long time though I did see it a few times. johannes
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