Sorry, I just saw the reply. I have not been checking me email ... sorry. I removed the "rhgb" from grub.conf, all is working great now. - Jamie On Jan 3, 2008 5:19 AM, Jim Cornette <fc-cornette@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Jamie Bohr wrote: > > Thank you this was the trick I was missing. I've done some looking > > (~10 minutes) around and don't quite know how rhgb affects the mouse > > but ha ... it worked and that is all I care about. > > > > Question: How did you figure this out? I had just finished installing > > kubuntu to see it worked and start comparing files. I hadn't even > > considered boot options in grub.conf. > > > > Thank you again .... > > Jamie, > What was the resolution? Removing rhgb from the startup, adding HWCursor > "off" or a combination? > I am assuming rhgb was causing the no mouse problem by your response. So > Karl's advice helped you out. > > Jim > > > > > > On Jan 1, 2008 1:33 PM, Karl Larsen <k5di@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> Jim Cornette wrote: > >>> Jamie Bohr wrote: > .. > >>>> I have the latest updates installed, the based install (no updates) > >>>> had the same issue. > >>>> > >>> It might be that your mouse is having problems showing. You could try > >>> adding > >>> Option "HWCursor" "off" > >>> to the xorg.conf file device section. > >>> > >>> I thought this problem was happening on NVidia binary drivers. It > >>> could also be happening with the X provided one. > >>> > >>> Jim > >>> > >> Also you need to erase the rhgb that follows the kernel name in > >> /root/grub/grub.conf and then it should work ok. These are both required > >> to get the pointer back. > >> > >> > >> Karl > > > -- > If life is a stage, I want some better lighting. > > -- > > fedora-list mailing list > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list > -- Jamie Bohr