Yes but making a large font still does not cange the resolution down to
640x480 as needed by ncurses programs like Debian's aptitude.

Why cannot GRUB put back the easy to use command to change the boot screen.

I am not looking to make large fonts in high resolution, I am trying to get
console resolution to what ncurses and ASCII graphics use.

I am using a kernel from kernel.org, there was a eay to do this by
modifying gfxpayload=keep and such lines but with the latest version of
grub even this difficult system no longer works.

Also if I install Grub-legacy, I can change the boot parameters to specify
resolution.  Everything is the same except those files  that were removed
by purging grub and installing grub-legacy.

Why can't this feature be kept?  It ensures compatability for those users
who wish to have a console only system.

If I can get what I want by removing grub and installing grub legacy, what
is changing is just grub.  Grub generates grub.cfg and that is the
problem:  tell Grub to allow an easy to enter resolution parameter like
grub-legacy allows.  Just bring back that feature for us console users.
Some day you wont be able to see the high resolution console with the tiny
letters :-)

Can you do this for us.

David
On Mar 1, 2013 11:07 PM, "Gerard Butler" <legendary_b...@hotmail.com> wrote:

> A few things, you can lower the resolution of grub to make the console
> look bigger I guess, or you can use grub-mkfont to generate a larger font
> and set that as your grub font. From the sounds of it you're also having
> issue with the tty font which I googled and found that yjou could
> reconfigure the font size (I don't know what distro you're using, but
> there's stuff on Ask Ubuntu).
>
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>
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