Hello Russell, On 7/17/20, Russell Coker <[email protected]> wrote: > On Thursday, 16 July 2020 3:19:19 PM AEST Mark Trickett via luv-main wrote: >> It is running on an AMD Ryzen 5 with 16 Gb of ram, and Gigabyte Nvidia >> Geforce GT 710 video card (NV106) driving a 24" LED Wintal 12V TV. > > Firstly while it's not related to the issues you are having, I think you > should consider buying an ATI video card. Every time I've used NVidia I've > had problems related to driver support. Currently I'm supporting a Windows > 10 system that's reliably running with a 4K video card that would cause > regular > system crashes in two different Linux systems.
The card was a relatively cheap option to work with a new motherboard, the PC that you gave me failed, seemed like MB or CPU, income had improved, enough, so I bought a MSI mainboard and Ryzen CPU, the board had video connectors, but the CPU did not include the video. It was a way to have video, without having any recommendation. I may buy something else, but timing is a bit of a pain at the moment with not supposed to travel. To get it as I currently want, I just need to be able to tell the video system to not use a uniform margin all round. The colour and crispness is not an issue, although I would not rely on the colour for photography, that is where I would look at the monitors you suggest. It may be that I need to redo the initial probe and detection for video configuration. As to TV at home, I have no free to air land based signal, I have to use a VAST box (Viewer Assisted Satellite Television), that is currently out of service. It is a UEC box, actually a small Linux box, but without external access, it has an ethernet port, but not enabled. If it continues to not work and I get another, I would like to bring it to a LUV workshop for the curious. > https://mjg59.dreamwidth.org/8705.html > > Next what type of TV is this and how are you connecting to it? The above > blog post has some information on how TVs don't work in a sane manner, > possibly > some of the issues in that post apply to you. If so you can probably get it > working properly (with some effort) but probably can't get the best > quality. it is a 12V Wintal 24" LED TV, I bought from Radio Parts, I intend to use it more with a Raspberry Pi to have a 12V system for mobile and remote computing. When I go to various events demonstrating handspinning, I would like to have computing facility, and the capacity to play a video of what I do when I have to go to the toilet or get lunch. > https://www.kogan.com/au/buy/kogan-24-full-hd-curved-75hz-freesync-gaming-monitor-1920-x-1080-a/ > > Here's a 24" FullHD monitor for $160 plus postage. That should just work > for the full screen display and not look fuzzy. Then you can have TV playing > as > well while you look at your computer during ad breaks. ;) > > https://www.kogan.com/au/buy/kogan-24-qhd-freesync-75hz-monitor-2560-x-1440/ > > Here's a 24" 2560*1440 monitor for $280. I am also running into another issue, a Debian bug with scanning. I have been reading up, but the behaviour is puzzling. SimpleScan works, but scanimage and the other command linme tools do not see the scanner, but it is there when I do lsusb. The scanner is a Canon LIDE 210, and it works well on the out of date Debian on the Acer TravelMate 3230. I appear to have appropriate permissions and such, but some detail is still out of place. I may try adding myself to the scanner group, but that should not be necessary. I want to use scanimage as I can increment an index number for each page the way I want, which is not the way SimpleScan does. Regards, Mark Trickett _______________________________________________ luv-main mailing list [email protected] https://lists.luv.asn.au/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/luv-main
