Eric "Shubes" wrote: > Just wanted to follow up on this for posterity. > > I ended up with the eVGA GeForce 6200 with subject monitor. > > First problem was that my power supply (300w, stated miniumum) didn't > have enough amps on the 12v rail (15a, needed 18a). EVGA technician > was extremely helpful diagnosing this, and I give high marks to > everyone on their support staff that I talked with. I bought a > UltraXFinity 500W PS from Fry's ($70 w/ $50 MIR), and they work fine > together. > > Next hurdle was the configuring X. Thanks to Carl's xorg.conf > settings, this was a breeze. Until I discovered that I couldn't adjust > the resolution to my liking. It seemed like it just wouldn't take the > specified resolutions. Then > I realized that the specified driver was (the generic) 'vesa'. After > googling a bit, I found that the nvidia driver is named 'nv'. When I > changed that, voila. Everything was worked well. > > This was on FC5. The bottom bar was a little beyond the bottom of the > display, so I selected the "Auto Image Adjust" function on the monitor > menu, and it straightened right up. Cool. > > Then I tried Ubuntu 5.10. Same X config settings I used in FC5. Two > problems: > 1) the bottom bar was off the screen, and I couldn't make it right. > AIA monitor function didn't fix it, and there's no manual vertical > size adjustment, only vertical position. This left me at a loss. > 2) the fonts on Ubuntu were very fuzzy. I noticed that Ubunto's X > configuration specifies various font files, while Fedora uses a font > server. Don't know if this changed in Ubuntu 6.06 or not, but I found > Ubuntu's fonts basically unusable at 1680x1050 (the monitor's > recommended resolution). > > Then I tried CentOS4.3. No nv driver on this distro. I didn't try to > bring it over from FC5. I was having other thoughts by now. > > I'm wondering at this point, why do I have 3 distros on my desktop > machine? Granted, it's kinda nice to be able to check out other > distros' config files on occasion, but is it worth it? I'm thinking, > what's the point? I have CentOS on my server, so I really don't need > it on my desktop any more. I have Ubuntu on my notebook (as well as > CentOS and that other one), so do I really need it on my desktop machine? > > I've concluded that it's not worth the effort, and that it's just not > productive. I'll leave the free space on my HD, and will probably use > it to try other distros as I get the itch. Otherwise, I'm settling on > FC5 for the time being. > > That's my story, and I'm sticking to it! ;) > Anyone else noticing that the DVI connection isn't working? I'm at a lost to what the problem is I've tried changing monitors (I ended up buying two VA2012wb, one on a computer that just has VGA). My graphic card has a DVI connection with a VGA converter using the converter works fine. so I don't think the problem is the graphics card. I've changed cords, that doesn't work. I have to assume its a xorg conf somewhere because if I stay in run level 3 DVI works fine. but as soon as I try to turn the GUI on I get *nothing* on the view screen. Even if I reboot. I don't remember exactly what drastic thing I had to do to reset it and get back to runlevel 3 but that would work. I can't really think of any reason why I *need* DVI but since my card supports it and the monitors are supposed to I feel like I should be using it. Also I've given up on multi distros on one computer as well. I was going to try to use Xen to get FC5 and openSuse 10.1 running on the same box. I ended up just running FC5 on my box and using FreeNX to run Suse 10.1 on my wife's so I can play with both from my desktop. --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss