On 5/9/2009 3:15 PM, Bill Davidsen wrote: > Craig White wrote: >> On Sat, 2009-05-09 at 23:59 +0930, Tim wrote: >>> On Fri, 2009-05-08 at 11:04 -0700, Mike Wright wrote: >>>> What I don't understand is that this display adapter has worked >>>> beautifully in fc4, fc6, and fc8 installations. >>> Changes in Xorg, over time... The difficulty with a live CD is that >>> it's virtually fixed with the original software, no updates. It's not >>> uncommon to find that people who've installed an OS (to writeable >>> media), and had graphics problems, that they've gone away after a "yum >>> update". >> ---- >> much of this could be resolved by more people running the testing >> versions and reporting issues with various hardware BEFORE it is >> released. > FC11 has not been released, and this problem goes back to FC9 at least, > that certain monitors are mis-detected and are either too high or low in > resolution. There should be one more install in addition to text and > graphic (automatic) modes, and that is install with vga=ask to let the > user pick the resolution needed. > You can't imagine how unreadable 640x480 is on a 42" HDTV, you need the > wireless keyboard and mouse to get about fifteen feet away. Or to enter > the correct resolution, but many users don't know how to do that. *My* Monitor is never detected correctly. I have to manually set this. The problem? *My* monitor does not identify itself properly. So is that Fedora's fault? Of my problem? I think it is the latter. At the very least they usually give you a viewable screen. The 'Evil God' Windows does not identify monitors. You get a viewable screen that you then setup using video drivers that you download and install by hand. Sheez... -- David -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines