Ted Miller wrote:
Edward Diener wrote:
Ted Miller wrote:
Edward Diener wrote:
The Vesa driver works fine with CentOS 4.4. I have an NVidia 6200
video adapter. I go to Applications | System Settings | Display |
Hardware tab and find my video adapter in the list and set it. The
dialog tells me I have to log out for it to take effect, so I duly
do that. I then getting a message from a non-graphics screen saying
that the attempt to switch to the video adapter failed.
[snip]
Use the vesa driver or use the proprietary nvidia driver. The nv
driver from xorg (or at least the version(s) supplies with Centos 4
do not support my 6200 card. No amount of fiddling made any
difference. The proprietary driver supports it very nicely (if your
computing philosophy allows you to use it).
My computing philosophy certainly allows me to use it. I view the GPL,
all offshoots of it, and everyone involved with the mess it has
created, as just a very small part of the next generation of petty
dictators, read "idiots" or in Alexander Pope's still relevant
terminology "dunces", in the world.
By proprietary driver do you mean the one on NVidia's web site ?
That's the one! :) Make sure you have the kernel-devel rpm that EXACTLY
MATCHES your running kernel, as the nvidia package compiles some kind of
a shim that goes between your kernel and their driver.
Also, before you upgrade the kernel next time, change back to the VESA
driver, as you will need to recompile the shim for the new kernel. Not
a big deal, just a show-stopper as far as Xwindows goes.
My card is a Gigabyte GV-NX62128D that I run dual-monitor, and it works
very well for me.
Thanks for the information. I will find the one on NVidia's site and
install it. Sorry for the GPL blast.
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