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Author Message
25 new of 257 responses total.
dang
response 75 of 257: Mark Unseen   Feb 20 22:17 UTC 1999

I have /usr/X11R6/bin/xf86config, which is a standard part of XFree86. 
If you installed X yourself, you didn't install the Xcfg.tgz package,
which is very suprising.  It's listed as needed.  If it came that way
from your distribution, that's again surprising.  I'd switch
distributions.  There is a program called Xconfigurator which runs a
stripped down X server and gives you a nice windows configuration
program.  You might try that.  I don't really like it, tho.
pfv
response 76 of 257: Mark Unseen   Feb 21 12:17 UTC 1999

        Yeppers, I suspect the Xconfigurator is what I've been using
        of late..Either I went too far in "cleaning house", or RedHat-
        stuff took a few liberties..

jshafer
response 77 of 257: Mark Unseen   Feb 21 12:46 UTC 1999

Anyone here used Accelerated X?  XFree86 doesn't support my i740
AGP video card, & i'm not sure if there's anything I can do to
make it work or not.  I haven't done too much mucking around with
it, but what I have done leads me to think that paying $75 for a
product that _should_ work right out of the box might be worthwhile.
toking
response 78 of 257: Mark Unseen   Feb 22 16:40 UTC 1999

(found xf86config, didn' do me too much good, so I think I"ll just have
to live with 8bpp)
dang
response 79 of 257: Mark Unseen   Feb 24 19:31 UTC 1999

(resp:78 if you need more than 8 bpp, you need a command line option on 
the command line that starts the actual X server.  If you are using 
startx, then try "startx -- -bpp 32" which will start with 32 bpp.  
Don't forget the "--", which signals startx that the following options 
are for X rather than xinit.  If you use xdm, then you need to edit 
/etc/X/xdm/Xservers and add " -bpp 32" to the end of the line containing 
/usr/X11R6/bin/X.)

resp:77  I use Accelerate X for my Diamond Monster Fusion.  It's a brand 
new alpha server.  However, until recently, I couldn't use Accelerated X 
because there wasn't a server.  There is a way around it.  Look here: 
http://www.uno.edu/~adamico/banshee/
jshafer
response 80 of 257: Mark Unseen   Feb 25 12:23 UTC 1999

Hmm.  Not sure how useful that will be, as I'm not using a banshee or 
Linux, but I'll check it out in more detail later...  Thanks.
toking
response 81 of 257: Mark Unseen   Feb 25 16:53 UTC 1999

if you read the page a little more it talks about how it could be useful
on something that's not a banshee 
dang
response 82 of 257: Mark Unseen   Feb 26 16:34 UTC 1999

Exactly.  It should work exactly the same on any modern graphics card. 
I had it running on my banshee for several months, and it's okay.  No
acceleration, so it's a bit slow, but otherwise okay.
gull
response 83 of 257: Mark Unseen   Feb 28 01:49 UTC 1999

What's the point of 32-bit color?  I was under the impression (perhaps
mistaken) that 24-bit color already could generate more shades than the
human eye could discern.  Is 32-bit color just a sop to the 'more is better'
crowd?
mwg
response 84 of 257: Mark Unseen   Mar 2 05:26 UTC 1999

I've found that xanim (a video player for Linux) will work with 16 or 32
bpp, but not 24.  Strange.
dang
response 85 of 257: Mark Unseen   Mar 2 22:14 UTC 1999

xearth, a "View of earth from space" program, won't work at 24 bpp 
either.  Just 16 or 32. 
gregb
response 86 of 257: Mark Unseen   Mar 3 02:49 UTC 1999

Okay, here's /my/ situation:  I'm running Red Hat 5.2 along with Win98, 
using Lilo (DOS is the default boot).  For me installation went quite 
smoothly.  I was a bit concerned that it might have trouble with my  
SCSI card (Adaptec 2940UW), but was delighted that Linux recognized 
it.  Each OS has it's own physical HD...Sorta.  I have three physical 
drives:  Two 540 meg (C: and D:), and one 4.3 gig (E:-G:).  I dedicated 
a little over a gig on the big drive.  I've partitioned Linux into "/" 
and "/swap."  

I've also installed Linux in my laptop at work.  That one shares a 
single 2.1 gig drive with Win98.  Only problem with that setup is I 
can't get X to work right.  It comes on, but everything's super-
magnified.  I've tried every video setting under Xconfigureator without 
success.

At first, I thought I'd go with Slackware, cuz that was the one I'd 
heard about most, but after doing some research, I went with Red Hat.  
They were getting great reviews about how easy to install it was and 
about their RPM system, which was a big plus for me as I've heard 
manually installing Linux stuff was rather frustrating.  Plus with the 
boxed version, they included a couple bonus CD's full of docs, FAQ's, 
apps, and not one, but two e-books on learning Linux in PDF format.  
And I paid a whooping 35 bucks for it;  The regular price was $54.

I guess the next question for me is, "What's next?"  Well, as I 
speak...er, type, I've DL'ed WordPerfect8 for Linux.  That'll be my 
first _real_ app.  Whew!  that sucker was big, over 26 megs.  I guess I 
should start reading the stuff on the other CD's I mentioned, starting 
with the e-books.

Anybody have any suggestions, comments about anything I've written, 
feel free.  I'm still quite the newbie where Linux is concerned, but I 
want to learn it all.  I'm hoping to eventually dump MF...I mean MS 
from my system.

Have a good one.
toking
response 87 of 257: Mark Unseen   Mar 3 07:21 UTC 1999

what kinda laptop is it?
eprom
response 88 of 257: Mark Unseen   Mar 3 17:00 UTC 1999

isn't there a trick where you press  control-alt-plus key  and it adjusts 
the resolution?
pfv
response 89 of 257: Mark Unseen   Mar 3 18:05 UTC 1999

        Keypad plus & minus - yeah, if you told X to use it.. And, if yer 
        setup has multiple modes.
gregb
response 90 of 257: Mark Unseen   Mar 4 00:15 UTC 1999

Re. 87:  It's a Fujitsu Lifebook 200

Re. 88, 89:  Been there, done that, no help.  And don't even _think_ of 
sugesting I contact Fujitsu.  while the laptop itself runs fine, 
dealing with F'edupsu is a nightmare on anybody's street.
mwg
response 91 of 257: Mark Unseen   Mar 10 20:20 UTC 1999

Super-magnified sounds like VGA resolution.  You probably need to find
out the chipset of your video hardware and get the specific X server for
that set, which may be tough on newer models.  I've only gotten suppord
for my 2-year old Diamond video card for full functionality in the last 3
months or so.  If your X software is less than 3.3.3 you might want to go
to www.xfree86.org and download the latest version.
gregb
response 92 of 257: Mark Unseen   Mar 11 17:28 UTC 1999

>Super-magnified sounds like VGA resolution.

That's what it was alright.  However, during setup, I specified I had 
SVGA, but nomater what res I set or monitor I specified, It kept 
droping back to VGA.  However, since my post, I've had /some/ success:  
I switched from using Xconfigurator, a Red Hat-specific program I 
believe, to the std. XF86config.  I was able to specify the exact 
chipset (Trident) I had.  I now have a regular 800x600 display.  Now, 
the only prob is the desktop and menus are all black;  Icons, however, 
are visable.  <Sigh!>...back to the drawing board, I guess.
gregb
response 93 of 257: Mark Unseen   Mar 11 17:31 UTC 1999

Speaking of X, I'm having some trouble distinguishing between the terms 
"X server" and "Windows Mngr."  Can someone clarify these, perhaps 
using the DOS world as an analogy?  It's not vital, but I would like to 
be clear on what's what.
pfv
response 94 of 257: Mark Unseen   Mar 11 17:47 UTC 1999

        The "X Server" or "X" or "X11" is a server-program that provides
        all the usual (and obnoxious) gobbledegook requisite of a Graphic
        User Unterface (GUI) in a "windowing environment".

        The "Window Manager" is a "client" program that adds another layer
        between the user, the GUI - which is what this provides - and the 
        server.

        _Theoretically_, you program to "X ne. X11" and the program is
        supposed to run under ANY OTHER "window manager". This is prolly
        a reasonable assumption, until you get to stuff like KDE and GNOME
        and ENLIGHTENMENT - all of which require additional libraries for
        support, and so do the better of the programs for them. This is
        even a problem with Motif/Lesstiff programs, and I'm sure someone
        can mention some more of these idiot-syncracies.

        The client/server approach even applies to X and its own "font
        server": with this "font server", you have the ability to teach
        X and linux to use TrueType (and FreeType ;-) fonts in addition to
        the typical unix font-crap. Unices are truly rich in client/server
        examples and implementations.

        This help any?
mwg
response 95 of 257: Mark Unseen   Mar 17 18:20 UTC 1999

Re:#92 How much memory does your video card have?
pfv
response 96 of 257: Mark Unseen   Mar 17 18:35 UTC 1999

        *sigh* Even 4m is moer than enough for the basics.
gregb
response 97 of 257: Mark Unseen   Mar 25 00:43 UTC 1999

Re. 92:  Two megs., more than enough at 800x600x16-bit.  But, hey, I'd 
be willing to settle for 256-color it it'll give me 800x600, or at 
least a true 640x480.

At this point, after playing with every setting I can think of, I get 
three possible results:  1) A blank screen, which means having to re-
boot to get back to normal.  2) A 640x480 display that shows all the 
proper backgroun/menu/text colors but blows everything up to 320x200 
proportions, without a virtual desktop.  3) An 800x600 display that 
shows no background/menu/text colors (all black), but /does/ display 
all icons properly, and has the virtual desktop.

As it stands, after a week of fiddling, I've given up on X and decided 
to concentrate on the other aspects of Linux, which there are plenty.  
I'll just have to chalk it up to one more reason never to get Fujitsu 
products again.
kentn
response 98 of 257: Mark Unseen   Mar 25 01:50 UTC 1999

A week of fiddling isn't too far off if your set up doesn't click right
out of the box.  The best luck I've had in getting X set up for my video
card was going through the recommended calculations by hand (well pocket
calculator) and fiddling until I had it the way I liked it.  Using all
the configurators and auto-set up programs I've only been able to get
close.  Take a deep breath, relax, leave off of it for a while, then go
back and read the docs (on my FreeBSD system the one about calculations
is called VideoModes.doc and is in /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/doc/ but may be
in a different place on your system) and see if you can't squeeze a
compromise out of your video card/monitor combination (I had a 1-meg
card doing 800x600 at 256-color and a bit of virtual desktop, but it
took a lot of fiddling).  Good luck.
shf
response 99 of 257: Mark Unseen   Mar 25 11:44 UTC 1999

2 meg was not enough video memory for me, and sometimes, at higher
resolutions, even 8meg will give me the dreaded black windows. 
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