It's fixed! I think the computer overheated a bit too much. On Thu, Jun 26, 2008 at 1:55 PM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 1. Try the monitor with another computer. If it does not work, it has > ended its useful life. > 2. Swap the connecting cable with another cable either analogue or digital > - the 7600 GS should have both sockets. If it does not work, your graphics > card may be at fault. > 3. Connect the monitor to computer cable to the motherboard VGA connection > and bypass the graphics card. > > If your monitor displays a "no signal" message then your monitor is OK and > the remaining culprits are your connecting cable and your graphics card. > > Andre > > -- > ubuntu-au mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-au > > -- Matthew Rossi I am for Macs, and the open source scene, are you? The Penguin Central Podcast - http://penguincentral.unixpod.com Everything you can imagine is real. Pablo Picasso Spanish Cubist painter (1881 - 1973) http://counter.li.org/cgi-bin/certificate.cgi/455532
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