That did the trick. So easy! Thanks. On Sun, January 28, 2007 10:44 pm, Gregory K. Ruiz-Ade wrote: > Stop downloading MS drivers, and go to nVidia.com and get the driver > directly from them. You may need to download the Legacy drivers (not > positive) depending on what version of nvidia chipset you have. > > I've had nothing but good experiences with nvidia's drivers, both on > linux and Windows. > > Gregory > > On Jan 28, 2007, at 8:40 PM, Lan Barnes wrote: > >> I have made my son's machine a dual boot. Win98 SE and FC5. The >> video card >> is a G-Force nVidia "NV18 GeForce4 MX 4000 8x". >> >> The FC5 found it and installed the driver. Every M$ driver I >> download says >> no nVidia chip found, then exits. >> >> I'm tired and disgruntled. >> >> The idea is, he can do his flight simulators on the M$ side, web >> surf on >> Linux. When I let him surf in M$, in a few weeks the machine is foobar >> from downloads that do evil. >> >> Any idea what is happening or where I might find the correct driver? >> >> -- >> Lan Barnes >> >> SCM Analyst Linux Guy >> Tcl/Tk Enthusiast Biodiesel Brewer >> >> >> -- >> [email protected] >> http://www.kernel-panic.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/kplug-list >> > > -- > Gregory K. Ruiz-Ade <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > OpenPGP Key ID: EAF4844B keyserver: pgpkeys.mit.edu > > > > -- > [email protected] > http://www.kernel-panic.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/kplug-list >
-- Lan Barnes SCM Analyst Linux Guy Tcl/Tk Enthusiast Biodiesel Brewer -- [email protected] http://www.kernel-panic.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/kplug-list
