I've had the same desktop computer for about five years, although in that time I've had a change of graphics card from an Nvidia Geforce to an AMD Radeon.
When I have installed Linux Ubuntu in the past, it always worked pretty much straight out of the tin without needing too much tweaking.
However, when I have tried to reinstall Linux in more recent times, the screen gets scrambled like this:
I have tried various versions of Ubuntu and also Mint. In fact I just downloaded the latest version, Mint 14, and still had the same problem.
I enquired on various Linux support forums about it and never even had a response. This is something that people complaining about Windows and moving to Linux need to take note of - it's fine when it's working, or if there's a problem that the 'community' can help you with, but sometimes they can be stumped and then you're on your own.
However, it's now occurred to me that it may not be the graphics card that is the problem. It could be the monitor. It has a native resolution of 1680x1050 and I suspect that Linux may not support this straight out of the box. I can see the instructions in writing at the beginning when Linux starts to boot up, it's what happens to the screen after booting is completed.
I only have the one monitor working at the moment, so may have to borrow one off someone to test this theory out.
If it is the monitor - and I strongly suspect it is now - can any Linux gurus help with any configuration text files I need to create to tell Linux the resolution is 1680x1050?
When I have installed Linux Ubuntu in the past, it always worked pretty much straight out of the tin without needing too much tweaking.
However, when I have tried to reinstall Linux in more recent times, the screen gets scrambled like this:
I have tried various versions of Ubuntu and also Mint. In fact I just downloaded the latest version, Mint 14, and still had the same problem.
I enquired on various Linux support forums about it and never even had a response. This is something that people complaining about Windows and moving to Linux need to take note of - it's fine when it's working, or if there's a problem that the 'community' can help you with, but sometimes they can be stumped and then you're on your own.
However, it's now occurred to me that it may not be the graphics card that is the problem. It could be the monitor. It has a native resolution of 1680x1050 and I suspect that Linux may not support this straight out of the box. I can see the instructions in writing at the beginning when Linux starts to boot up, it's what happens to the screen after booting is completed.
I only have the one monitor working at the moment, so may have to borrow one off someone to test this theory out.
If it is the monitor - and I strongly suspect it is now - can any Linux gurus help with any configuration text files I need to create to tell Linux the resolution is 1680x1050?
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