My current screen resolution is 800x600 with refreshing rate When
I manually configure it using the graphic panel and restart the
system, I cannot work with Fedora as I get the warning message from my
monitor that the refreshing rate is out of range (too high).
or not to f7. The work around is to manually set up your monitor
after the install.
Which, in case you don't know, means editing your etc/X11/xorg.conf.
I don't have a reference here, but search for "xorg.conf" manual
pages. You need to add a "Monitor" subsection for your monitor, then
update your "Screen" subsection to know about that monitor. You set
your refresh range in the "Screen" section if I recall. This is a
fairly common problem I think.
Re: Radeon 7500 and AOC 17Klr monitor *almost* works... ... On Wed, 2004-04-14 at 15:23, Curtis Rempel wrote: ... > install if necessary to obtain some more clues. ... > description below since Fedora is my preference. ... > I installed Fedora using an IBM 2237 monitor and the picture was great ... (Fedora)
Re: A long, strange FC3 problem (fwd) ... > the monitor and plug it back in when it switches from boot messages ... Sorry, but no. nVidia's drivers are not open source, and so do not ... qualify for inclusion with Fedora Core.... And there is always the text install if it is X causing ... (Fedora)
Re: Radeon 7500 and AOC 17Klr monitor *almost* works... ... When I dual boot to Fedora (or even during the ... > without touching the monitor controls gives a great picture however. ... > during install and subsequent boot. ... What are Software Patents for? ... (comp.os.linux.x)
Re: Radeon 7500 and AOC 17Klr monitor *almost* works... ... When I dual boot to Fedora (or even during the ... > without touching the monitor controls gives a great picture however. ... > during install and subsequent boot. ... What are Software Patents for? ... (comp.os.linux.setup)