Hello.  I have been using an openSUSE-12.2, Linux operating system and have 
gotten along okay with it.  But after I updated to openSUSE 12.3 I found that 
the lower half of my openSUSE-12.3 login screen was "messed up."  I could only 
get it to look good by adding x11failsafe to the Linux kernel command in the 
GRand Unified Bootloader (GRUB) Legacy or GRUB 2.  My Hewlett-Packard ZE1110, 
Pavilion notebook computer uses an S3 Graphics Twister or Twister-K display.  
Since then I returned to using an openSUSE-12.2, Linux operating system, but 
have an interest in getting openSUSE 12.3 to work well with my computer.  I 
learned that I could obtain some X-Server-related information from the files 
/var/log/Xorg.0.log or Xorg.O.log and /var/log/Xorg.0.log.old or Xorg.O.log.old 
in openSUSE Linux.

In openSUSE 12.2, in which the login screen looked good, X.org X Server 1.12.3 
is used with "X.org Video Driver 12.0" and Linux kernel 3.4.33-2.24-default.  
In openSUSE 12.3, in which the lower half of the login screen was "messed up," 
I found that "X.org Video Driver" 13.1 was used with Linux kernel 
3.7.10-1.1-default.  So I guess that openSUSE 12.3 may have used X.org X Server 
1.13.... to match the "13" in "X.org Video Driver 13.1.

Question 1: Is this guess correct?

A solution about which I have been wondering is to make openSUSE 12.3 use X.org 
X Server 1.12.3, which contained X.org Video Driver 12.0, which worked well 
with my S3 Graphics Twister or Twister-K display for I suppose a video card of 
the same designation.  However, that might not work if X.org X Server 1.12.3 
cannot work with the Linux kernel version 3.7.10-1.1-default used in openSUSE 
12.3.

Question 2a: So what are the Linux kernel requirements for X.org X Server 
1.12.3?
Question 2b: Will it work with the Linux kernel 3.7.10-1.1-default?
Question 2c: I get the impression that at least some versions of X.org X Server 
are general, kernel-version-number-specific, for example, version 2.4, 2.6, et 
cetera?  Is that true of all of them?

Other people have suggested I try the nomodeset kernel parameter to work with 
my display or video hardware.  But unfortunately that addition by itself did 
not prevent the lower half of my login screen from looking "messed up" in 
openSUSE 12.3.

Question 3: In the GRUB Legacy I tried to use initrd-3.4.33-2.24-default and 
vmlinuz-3.4.33-2.24-default in openSUSE 12.3 which uses the Linux kernel 
version 3.7.10-1.1-default.  For some basic education for me please explain why 
that did not work.  Perhaps it is as simple as writing that I was trying to 
boot an operating system written to use kernel 3.7.10-1.1-default with the 
Linux kernel 3.4.33-2.24-default, like mixing "apples" with "oranges," as one 
saying goes.

Question 4a: How may I force openSUSE 12.3, which uses Linux kernel version 
3.7.10-1.1-default, to work with X.org Video Driver 12.0, which worked with my 
computer's display hardware in the Linux kernel 3.4.33-2.24-default?
Question 4b: Or is that impossible?

Pat 
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