Adam Funk wrote:
Yesterday I shut my Debian box off, swapped in a different graphics
card, rebooted, went into a console and changed one line of
XF86Config-4 (the Driver line for the card) and did "/etc/init.d/gdm
restart". The screen resolution is the same and the monitor is the
same.
The GDM login screen came up in a slightly larger font and the fonts
used by XFCE4, Firefox and the KDE apps that I run all came up
differently.
Why does just changing the graphics card (and driver) while keeping
everything else constant have this effect?
I don't have the explanation, but what you describe is true.
You are running a 1 user Debian system. I run a 2 user Debian system
with 2 videocards (TNT2 AGP and MX-440 PCI) 2 monitors (Samsung 750s and
753dfx) 2 keyboards and 2 mice.
The display on the TNT2 AGP looks different than the display on the
MX-440 (and looks better!) the fonts are slightly different and the
screen size is different although there is only one XF86Config-4 that
has 2 device entries and the same Nvidia closed source driver. Gdm
brings up 2 Xservers that drive both monitors, one slightly later than
the other one. The users use Debian independently.
Works very nicely. If I had Matrox cards I would even have vc's on both
monitors and now I don't: only the AGP monitor has vc's.
The gory details:
http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?forum_id=5379
H
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