We are revisiting this utility since I got to know its power only recently.
Silly me! $ xrandr -o left $ xrandr -o right $ xrandr -o inverted $ xrandr -o normal Try all this. It is great fun! $ xrandr -s 1024x768 will set the 1024x768 pixels mode. You set the refresh rate with the -r switch. In my case I can get the 1280x1024 mode, but then the refresh rate is very poor. So I switched back. For higher modes you get lower refresh rates since there are limitations in the graphics memory of the graphics card. Of course you guys must be knowing the Alt Ctl + and Alt Ctrl - keystrokes for switching between modes. And you can kill X by Alt Ctrl Backspace. If you are running a display manager this will only restart X. Remember xrandr is a X extension. You should have it loaded for all this to work. In general all my tips may necessitate installation of some package. You have to take care of that. Since there is no universal way to install packages and you cannot install all packages from source I will leave that out. You have to figure out. If you are using Debian, of course things are very simple. ;) -Girish -- Gayatri Hitech web: http://gayatri-hitech.com SpamCheetah Spam filter: http://spam-cheetah.com _______________________________________________ To unsubscribe, email [email protected] with "unsubscribe <password> <address>" in the subject or body of the message. http://www.ae.iitm.ac.in/mailman/listinfo/ilugc
