Help with resolution settings

Basil Chupin blchupin at iinet.net.au
Wed Sep 8 07:51:32 UTC 2010


On 08/09/2010 12:49, James Takac wrote:
> Hi Basil
>
> On Wednesday 08 September 2010 09:52:06 Basil Chupin wrote:
>    
>> On 08/09/2010 09:28, James Takac wrote:
>>      
>>> Hi Johnny
>>>
>>> On Tuesday 07 September 2010 23:18:21 Johnny Rosenberg wrote:
>>>        
>>>> Den 2010-09-07 14:41:39 skrev Karl Larsen<klarsen1 at gmail.com>:
>>>>          
>>>>> On 09/07/2010 01:52 AM, Vic Main wrote:
>>>>>            
>>>>>> Hi...
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I need some help with the resolution settings and how to change them.
>>>>>> I have a *NVIDIA GeForce4 MX440 with AGP8X card, *when I downloaded
>>>>>> the suggested driver and activated it,
>>>>>>    I could change the shadow on the mouse pointer, but my choices for
>>>>>> resolution were 320x240 and 640x480. Not very useful!!!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The generic Ubuntu driver gives me a choice of 640x480, 800x600, and
>>>>>> 1024,x768. I would like to have a resolution of 1280x1024 if possible.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> That's the resolution I'm running on the same monitor with windows.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The monitor is a Daytek LCD 19", but haven't got the model, have to
>>>>>> dig around for that.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Any answers most appreciated
>>>>>>
>>>>>> *Vic
>>>>>> *
>>>>>>              
>>>>>        Hi Vic, you need to learn which Ubuntu version your using. I
>>>>> assume it is 10.04 but you don't say.
>>>>>
>>>>> Since you know the video card, you should be able to find the exact
>>>>> driver software for your system. Try going to the NVIDIA web page and
>>>>> look for the driver for a MX440 card.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> 73 Karl
>>>>>            
>>>> Didn't he just say that he did that?
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> Kind regards
>>>>
>>>> Johnny Rosenberg
>>>>          
>>> I believe he did. The notebook I'm on at the moment has the same card and
>>> is running 8.04 with suggested driver.
>>>        
>> What is this "suggested driver"? Perhaps this is where the problem may
>> lie - how about mentioning the driver number, what do you think?
>>
>> BC
>>
>> --
>> ...more people are driven insane through religious hysteria than by
>> drinking alcohol. W C Fields
>>      
>
> It's been quite a while since I installed the driver and remember going to the
> nvidia website searching for it, downloading and installing it. Seems however
> my system has for some reason reverted to the nvidia glx driver? Considering
> that I didn't change it to that I find that interesting. In synaptic I can
> see a glx legacy So I'm going to have to look at that again. Back then I
> matched the recommended driver from the site and installed. Got the black
> screen on boot and had to edit for only the 2d side of the driver. Somewhere
> over the week I'll go thru and see if an updated driver exists or maybe now
> the glx legacy driver maybe works
>
> James
>    

Read my other responses to something which Ric wrote and Michael Haney 
wrote.

FORGET about going to nVidia itself and try to install a driver from 
that site.

All this is now history.

Use Ubuntu's System>Administration>Hardware Drivers to install the 
nVidia driver.

The nVidia driver which you would download from nVidia itself needs to 
be COMPILED against the kernel you have installed in Ubuntu. Do you have 
all the kernel-related files installed to be able to do this?

BC


-- 
Fact is that which enough people believe. Truth is determined by how fervently they believe it.





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