2008/9/4 Tony Godshall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> But if you need the big screen, why the laptop? Surely you get
> a better bang for the buck with a traditional motherboard/monitor
> setup. Especially if you want a low-rez big screen.
>
The desktop is rather difficult to carry to the university ever
>> Same with my old Sony Vaio PCG-8C3L aka
>> PCG-GRX560. 1600x1200. That is, until the
>> display started to go (these days is is crisp in
>> text mode but goes nasty left-right flickery.
>>
>> Anyhow, yes, I've been able to get video out through
>> the VGA connector at whatever resolution the
>
2008/9/4 Tony Godshall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> My Dell (an old insprion 8600) runs 1920x1200.
>
> A nice surprise on Ubuntu 7.04 and later was that it
> Just Worked. I didn't have to tweak the /etc/X11
> configs at all!
>
Configuring this screen is a pain in Debian, with no two installs
working in
My Dell (an old insprion 8600) runs 1920x1200.
A nice surprise on Ubuntu 7.04 and later was that it
Just Worked. I didn't have to tweak the /etc/X11
configs at all!
Same with my old Sony Vaio PCG-8C3L aka
PCG-GRX560. 1600x1200. That is, until the
display started to go (these days is is crisp i
I have a Dell Inspiron E1505 / 6400 with the ATI X1400 video card and
a 1680x1050 15.4" monitor. I am considering purchasing an LCD monitor
for use at home, as the 15.4" screen is too tiny.
How can I know what maximum resolution the VGA output is capable of?
For that matter, how do I enable it? I
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