On Tue, Mar 14, 2000 at 12:37:47AM -0800, wah wrote:
> On 13 Mar 2000, Marshal Kar-Cheung Wong wrote:
> > You may have to change the default resolution for the Xserver. First
> > off, when you are in X, try pressing --+ or
> > ---.
>
> This doesn't work
>
> > This should change the resolution,
On Tue, Mar 14, 2000 at 06:01:05PM +0900, Olaf Meeuwissen wrote:
> wah <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > How do I change the resolution???
>
> bash-2.03$ startx -- -bpp 24
>
> or some other depth (8, 16, 32). If that works, add DefaultColorDepth
> to the relevant Screen sections in your XF86Con
wah <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> How do I change the resolution???
bash-2.03$ startx -- -bpp 24
or some other depth (8, 16, 32). If that works, add DefaultColorDepth
to the relevant Screen sections in your XF86Config file, for details,
see `man XF86Config`.
Hope this helps,
--
Olaf Meeuwisse
On 13 Mar 2000, Marshal Kar-Cheung Wong wrote:
> You may have to change the default resolution for the Xserver. First
> off, when you are in X, try pressing --+ or
> ---.
This doesn't work
> This should change the resolution, if the problem is
> what I think it is. If it changes, then you'll
You may have to change the default resolution for the Xserver. First
off, when you are in X, try pressing --+ or
---. This should change the resolution, if the problem is
what I think it is. If it changes, then you'll have to edit
/etc/X11/XF86Config file so that it starts at the higher resoluti
Hi all,
I've had one out of two problems successfully dealt with by the collective
knowledge on this list, so here come some more...
I finally found a video card that works with XF86. I went through
XF86Setup, this time with no problems.
...but after XF86Setup is finsished and successfully st
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