I have a peculiar problem with my SUSE10. The relevant parts of my set-up are an NVIDIA FX5200 graphics card and a TFT monitor. After an installation, using the "nv" driver, there is always a broad black band each side of the screen. This is normal, for any installation on this machine. The picture isn't wide enough. I can increase the width in SAX if I need to, but I rarely do it that way. Whichever distro I am trying out, the first things I usually do are to install any security updates, then download and install the official NVIDIA driver. Without altering any settings, the new driver always fills the screen correctly. This is what I did with SUSE10, using YAST. Logging out and then back in was OK, the "official" driver had filled the screen. However, on rebooting, the picture had shifted over to the left of the screen, leaving a broad black band on the right. To cut several hours of experimenting short, it would appear that if there is a flash of the NVIDIA splash screen during booting, the picture is OK. If there isn't the splash screen, I get the black band and shifted picture. So I am wondering if sometimes the NVIDIA driver kicks in, and sometimes it doesn't. But I may be wrong. I have done this many times and with several distros (including previous versions of SUSE), and it has always worked perfectly. There is only the problem doing it in SUSE10. During my experimenting, I have tried the monitor driver which was initially installed, the generic LCD one and the generic VESA one. Just to eliminate the drivers. If I alter the screen position settings in SAX, so that there's no band, at the next boot it has "gone" again. Any ideas will be very gratefully received, as I don't want to have to do multiple boots each time, until it decides to work! This is rather a long posting, but I hope it's reasonably clear. Keith