On Wed, Jun 18, 2014 at 6:28 PM, tlux <tlux@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > So, here is my point: > I have a lenovo T540p with a 3K screen display and, as > one could image, I have very small fonts and icons which are barelly visible at > normal distance from the screen. I've manage to increase fonts size in my > configurations files. However, from time to time I need to connect to a 19" > monitor(1280x1024) and the result is terrible (to say the least). I'm not sure, but maybe you can try the `xrandr --scale` option. It will make applications believe that the resolution is different than it really is. It may somehow blur the borders, but with such a high resolution it shouldn't be a problem. For example, assuming that your 3K display output is named LVDS-0: xrandr --output LVDS-0 --scale 0.5x0.5 will make it show the image twice bigger. > One option I thought of would be to create an udev rule that would detect > the monitor's connection and trigger a script that would make all the necessary > connfiguration changes. What do you guys think? If you decide to use `xrandr`, the two display outputs will have different names, so there will be independent --scale options: xrandr --output LVDS-0 --scale 0.5x0.5 xrandr --output VGA-0 --scale 1x1 # for illustration purposes: it is the default No need to hack udev! HTH Rodrigo