Valeri Galtsev wrote: > > On Fri, May 6, 2016 8:28 am, Johnny Hughes wrote: >> On 05/06/2016 07:12 AM, Phelps, Matthew wrote: >>> On Fri, May 6, 2016 at 8:06 AM, Jerry Geis <geisj@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> >>> wrote: >>> >>>> | What is your graphics card model? >>>> NVIDIA Corporation GK208 [GeForce GT 720] This does 4K >>>> >>>> | Which driver are you using? >>>> I am using the NOUVEAU at this time >>> >>> I would suggest trying the NVIDIA proprietary driver from the ELRepo >>> >>> rpm --import https://www.elrepo.org/RPM-GPG-KEY-elrepo.org >>> rpm -Uvh >>> http://www.elrepo.org/elrepo-release-7.0-2.el7.elrepo.noarch.rpm >>> yum install kmod-nvidia >>> reboot <snip> > <rant> > And indeed, nvidia proprietary driver "will work better" for less trivial > cases. E.g., if you attach two screens with different resolution. open > source driver will not handle it, whereas proprietary driver will. This is > why I, to the contrary to majority of Linux folks, never favored nvidia. > ATI (at least before they were bought by AMD) and matrox were disclosing > much more detail about their chips, thus providing to open source <snip> Perhaps, but *every* time I have to deal with ATI cards, it's a royal pain. Esp. since the Catalyst drives is now "replaced" (except it wasn't available for Linux, when I was trying to use it in the late fall. I had to replace a couple of users' video cards with *old* NVidia ones, after I rebuilt them as CentOS 7, because I *could* *not* get them to respond properly to their visualization software, nor to one's 27"? 29" diagonal monitor; it wouldn't support the video mode. At least I *can* rebuild it, NVidia does support it that way, and the rebuild always works. mark _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos