=?big5?B?rbu05LxlwFc=?= said...

|One day, the monitor died. I went to buy a second-hand monitor. =
|Comparing with the NEC monitor, it was not as good, but it could =
|function.=20
|
|It worked fine with windows, but in linux when I type "startx" or =
|"xinit", the screen went crazy. I typed "Ctrl-Alt-Backspace" to get out. =

Right - your new monitor does not have anything like
the timings you had selected for your old one.

|How can I solve this problem? And why does this problem occur? I tried =
|to lower the vertical and horizontal refresh rate in XF86Config, but it =
|didn't help. I wonder the reason of the problem is that Linux doesn't =
|support my monitor (my monitor's brandname is "ICL ErgoPro").

Do you know the specs for your monitor?  If you know
the minimum and maximum horizontal and vertical rates,
you can look in the /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/doc/Monitors
file to find something similar, and select the similar
monitor as a starting point.

I have been using Xconfigurator lately nistead of xf86config,
but I don;t know if that comes with XFree86 or if it's from
RedHat...

-Miles
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