On Monday, 30. July 2012. 18.43.13 Oscar Vidal wrote:
> I tried already these commands and these are the outputs:
>
> # lspci | grep -i vga
> 01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: nVidia Corporation Device 0de2 (rev a1)
You have a nVidia graphics card, which is not (yet) recognized by the Fedora's
On 07/30/2012 07:19 PM, Bryn M. Reeves wrote:
Just to be sure. I am not the OP or the person with the problem OK?
:-)
> On Mon, 2012-07-30 at 19:05 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
>> I find the output of lspci a bit odd. I thought that it would indicate the
>> card type. Mine, for examp
On Mon, 2012-07-30 at 19:05 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
> I find the output of lspci a bit odd. I thought that it would indicate the
> card type. Mine, for example, is ...
>
> 1:00.0 VGA compatible controller: nVidia Corporation G92 [GeForce GT 230]
> (rev a2)
Getting numeric output indicates t
On 07/30/2012 06:43 PM, Oscar Vidal wrote:
> I tried already these commands and these are the outputs:
>
> # lspci | grep -i vga
> 01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: nVidia Corporation Device 0de2 (rev a1)
>
> # xrandr
> xrandr: Failed to get size of gamma for output default
> Screen 0: minimum 640
Hello Ed,
Thanks for your answer.
I tried already these commands and these are the outputs:
# lspci | grep -i vga
01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: nVidia Corporation Device 0de2 (rev a1)
# xrandr
xrandr: Failed to get size of gamma for output default
Screen 0: minimum 640 x 480, current 1024 x
On 07/30/2012 09:48 AM, Oscar Vidal wrote:
> I'm new with fedora, I has been Ubuntu user during last years. Now I'm facing
> a problem with my workstation when I installed Fedora 17. I'm not able to
> configure the right resolution for the system, I'm using a Dell Vostro 460
> i5. Im wondering i