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Fedora is also deprecating the xorg.conf. In my case it is a laptop with an ATI Radeon chip and (about 5 years old). Apparently the Ubuntu Display Preferences panel does update the xorg.conf file, but fortunately renames the old one by date/time. Unfortuantely it is a cut-throat industry, and none of the chip makers want to open source their drivers out of fear that it will expose their chips. I have an Nvidia system at home. It also seems that these guys generally come out with incompatible chips every few months. On 10/22/2009 10:38 AM, Martin Owens wrote: > In Ubuntu the xorg.conf file is slowly being deprecated in favour of > xrandr and proper hardware detection. The problem is that in order to > detect the capabilities of a monitor or screen, your computer needs: > > 1) Chipset drivers able to invoke i2c and ddr requests > 2) A screen or monitor with such a chipset (most new ones do) > 3) And for the monitor to not lie (which they do) > 4) A chipset that doesn't screw up the results (some do) > > So it's all a bag of crap because none of the chipset companies could > get their act together and the screen manufacturers don't pay enough > attention to data quality control. > > The reason nvidia is such a pain in the neck is that nvidia doesn't > support randr, or kms, or any useful xorg service except the old stuff > like dri and i2c. Of course if you just using the nv driver, that has n= o > scanning support so it won't ever be able to see the screen settings. > =20 --=20 Jerry Feldman <gaf-mNDKBlG2WHs at public.gmane.org> Boston Linux and Unix PGP key id: 537C5846 PGP Key fingerprint: 3D1B 8377 A3C0 A5F2 ECBB CA3B 4607 4319 537C 5846
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