On Fri, 2011-06-10 at 15:50 -0500, Brent Busby wrote: > On Thu, 9 Jun 2011, Ralf Mardorf wrote: > > > I experienced the same issues regarding to the resolution and the 60 > > Hz stroboscope (and a non working mouse wheel for my PS/2 mouse, slow > > down Internet for PPPoE etc.) with current debianoid Linux. They drop > > old hardware, even if they claim not to do. > > I don't know if it's related to your problem, but since I run Gentoo, I > see a lot of the changes that happen as they come down from upstream. > > Some things that have changed recently regarding the kernel and X11, or > at least probably since the last time you upgraded: > > * KMS is now becoming normal. KMS is Kernel Mode Setting, which means > the kernel now has control of your video resolution rather than the X > server. This is apparently more efficient at the machine level, but > because it is now just debuting, it is still somewhat buggy on some > video chipsets. (I have an older Radeon card at home that it doesn't > work on without all sorts of video problems, but a newer Radeon at > work that KMS works flawlessly on.) Because KMS is now in charge of > setting your screen resolution, your problem may be related. It is > possible to disable it, either with a kernel parameter passed from > Grub ("nomodeset"), or by recompiling your kernel with the KMS option > set to default to off. I had to do this with my home machine. > > * Individual device drivers for X11 input devices (keyboard, mouse, > trackpad, etc.) have become obsolete. No longer does X use a keyboard > driver, a mouse driver, and so on. One driver called 'evdev' now > handles all input. > > * Also, this isn't the actual upstream Linux kernel, but is Debian -- > they have now decided to drop non-OpenSource firmware blobs from their > packaged kernel. This has the effect of making some peripherals that > once worked fine now unusable on the packaged Debian kernel. In some > cases, it even makes Debian uninstallable on machines which need such > firmware blobs to run their disk controllers. > > Your problem could be something else entirely though...Linux is a > rolling stone. Thank you for the explanation :) I had a stressful week with setting up Linux and I'm not ready yet, but the only thing I didn't get working is the mouse. I replaced it with an USB mouse, anything else does work. Now I only need to set up nonessentials. Most things seems to work better, than they have ever worked before. Regarding to the Internet it could be issues caused by my provider, I don't know. The computer now seems to be in a good shape and my systolic blood pressure was at 154 in the morning and is at 142 now ;), if I reach 139 Linux and I are ok again. Oh, this is for the imaginary OT blog. I did expect trouble with audio, but not with anything else. Still euphoric, but not pissed of. My impression is that audio reached a very high quality state, but that the environment, desktop, X etc. might do a small step in the wrong direction, but at the moment I'm unable to see it dispassionate. Hm, ok, time to stop writing OT, but I liked to reply. Should do a backup now. Best, Ralf _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user