** Description changed:
Ubuntu newbie here. On startup, I get a message that it has to use low-
res display - and the display is very odd. It's like it doesn't have a
driver for an HP Touchsmart (desktop). Also I get no sound (don't know
if they are related...). I just upgraded from
Sorry for not responding in so long. The issue that you reported is one
that should be reproducible with the live environment of the Desktop CD
of the development release - Lucid Lynx. It would help us greatly if you
could test with it so we can work on getting it fixed in the next
release of
** Changed in: xserver-xorg-video-intel (Ubuntu)
Status: New = Confirmed
--
On boot up, I get a message that it has to use low-res and I can't change a
thing on the display settings (I'm on an HP touchsmart).
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/522820
You received this bug notification
Thank you for providing that information. It seems that Ubuntu is
definitely detecting your graphics card, there is just something
preventing it from working properly. I have marked this as a bug
affecting 'xserver-xorg-video-intel'. If you could please run 'apport-
collect 522820', information
** Tags added: karmic
--
On boot up, I get a message that it has to use low-res and I can't change a
thing on the display settings (I'm on an HP touchsmart).
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/522820
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to
Here are the results:
mematt...@mematthes-desktop:~$ lspci
00:00.0 Host bridge: Intel Corporation Mobile 4 Series Chipset Memory
Controller Hub (rev 07)
00:02.0 VGA compatible controller: Intel Corporation Mobile 4 Series Chipset
Integrated Graphics Controller (rev 07)
00:02.1 Display
Ok, I was able to get the error message fixed so I could run the package
manager. It did find the intel package.
Sent from my iPhone
On Feb 20, 2010, at 12:31 AM, Draycen DeCator ddeca...@gmail.com
wrote:
Thank you for the quick response. Could you please verify that the
Thank you for double checking that. Before I assign this bug to a
specific package, I would just like to make sure that your Ubuntu system
is detecting your graphics card. Could you please run 'lspci' in the
Terminal and paste the results into a comment? This command will list
your hardware,
I tried to run Synaptic Package Manager but got this error message:
E: dpkg was interrupted, you must manually run 'sudo dpkg --configure-a' to
correct the problem.
E:_cache- open () failed, please report.
At this point, is there a way to wipe Ubuntu off the machine, then
reinstall 9.04?
---
Thank you for the update. Running 'sudo dpkg --configure-a' in the
Terminal should allow you to access the Synaptic Package Manager and see
whether or not the proper driver for your system is installed. However,
if you still wish to do a clean install, then you can do so using a Live
CD. If Ubuntu
Good Morning,
I did what you suggested (and thanks for the step-by-step
instructions). Unfortunately, no drivers showed-up. The program did
search and when it stopped working, the list was blank.
--- On Thu, 2/18/10, Draycen DeCator ddeca...@gmail.com wrote:
From: Draycen DeCator
Sorry if I send this twice, it seems to keep coming back to me.
--- On Fri, 2/19/10, Mike Matthes matth...@yahoo.com wrote:
From: Mike Matthes matth...@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: [Bug 522820] Re: On boot up, I get a message that it has to use
low-res and I can't change a thing on the display
Thank you for the quick response. Could you please verify that the
'xserver-xorg-video-intel' package is installed on your system?
Also, when you reply to the emails you get from Launchpad, your response
is automatically added to the bug report as a comment. Once it is added,
you receive another
Hi, and thanks for responding! I did run the Update Manager which
failed to get 2 of the files. I tried it again and it seemed to get
them the second time (something called xulrunner).
I'll look into the NVidia idea on the windows side of the machine ( I
tried to run System Testing and the
Thank you for the update. Can you please login to Ubuntu and see if you
have the graphics driver installed? In order to do this, you should be
able to go System - Administration - Hardware Drivers. This will
search for available proprietary drivers for your system. Once the
search is done, you
Thank you for taking the time to report this bug and helping to make
Ubuntu better. If you have not done so, please run the Update Manager to
make sure your system is up to date. Hopefully doing so will fix some of
the problems you are experiencing. In regards to your graphics issue, do
you have
** Attachment added: Dependencies.txt
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/39277170/Dependencies.txt
** Attachment added: ProcMaps.txt
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/39277171/ProcMaps.txt
** Attachment added: ProcStatus.txt
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/39277172/ProcStatus.txt
** Attachment
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