2012/3/5 Felipe Rozélio <feliperoze...@gmail.com>: > Good morning, well I used the amd64 debian squeeze in a philips monitor had > a resolution of 1024x768 > and had no problem. I bought a monitor from AOC e943Fwsk 18.5 'and then the > problems started, > first noticed on the right side there was a thin black belt by cutting a > small piece of the picture, > I researched and researched and found how to install the nvidia drivers and > set up. Drivers installed and xorg.conf > created, now restart your pc when rebooted I noticed the fonts slightly > deformed, was soon set in > the monitor, except that the resolution does not leave 1368x768 50 Hz > whereas my monitor is 1366x766. after > attempt to do a lot of work and leave the legal resolution without that > black strip on the right side > cutting some of the image, changed the driver setting in xorg.conf instead > of "nvidia", "nv" and rebooted > X. When she returned I noticed that the image was further cut down a bit and > decided the resolution > to 1360x768 and it was perfect, and so it is now that the image is complete > and uncut. > But anyway there is a mistake because I wanted to use my 1366x768 resolution > with no problems and > I noticed it on many distros, not only in Debian. Has anyone experienced the > same problem with resolution > wide?
Probably some issue with how the monitor's EDID information is being reported. Dealing with that is something I haven't had to do really, I can't help much. There should be some workarounds, but it likely requires deep X modeline stuff. If you want to skip the "trying to fix it" part and go straight to despair, read Matthew Garrett's (mjg59) blog entries about it. Cheers, Kelly Clowers -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/CAFoWM=-gu6n_ycz6oxyfv+v3xrnsr942xt24+sw1o5umdan...@mail.gmail.com