On Saturday 10 Apr 2004 12:14 pm, Narendra Nath S wrote: > (II) SIS(0): Not using default mode "1024x768" (hsync out of range) > (II) SIS(0): Not using default mode "1024x768" (hsync out of range) > (II) SIS(0): Not using default mode "1024x768" (hsync out of range) > (II) SIS(0): Not using default mode "1152x864" (hsync out of range) > (II) SIS(0): Not using default mode "1280x960" (hsync out of range) > (II) SIS(0): Not using default mode "640x480" (hsync out of range) > (II) SIS(0): Not using default mode "800x600" (hsync out of range)
From the above , can we infer that your monitor is set to any one of the out-of-range resoutions ? Looks like the SIS card in your box is not correclty configured by X . Why don't you reconfigure the card and see what happens ? $redhat-xfree-config Jus recalled, do you have framebuffer enabled in your BIOS when there is no frame buffer support in your mobo ? Raghu. ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by: IBM Linux Tutorials Free Linux tutorial presented by Daniel Robbins, President and CEO of GenToo technologies. Learn everything from fundamentals to system administration.http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id70&alloc_id638&op=click _______________________________________________ linux-india-help mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/linux-india-help
