Steffen Winterfeldt writes:
On Mon, 3 Apr 2006, Mark Gray wrote:
Steffen Winterfeldt writes:
On Mon, 3 Apr 2006, Mark Gray wrote:
This is the same thing that happened when I installed SUSE-10.0 boxed set on this machine -- when starting the install using the default 1280x1024 resolution, the installer uses too high a refresh rate for my brand new HP vs17e LCD monitor H: 46.4 kHz V: 87Hz. The best
This is 43Hz interlaced (!). Not much to do about it, the BIOS picks the timing.
The computer is an HP also -- you'd think the BIOS would know better. When I encountered the problem with 10.0 there were a lot of hits for the same problem on google, so some sort of warning might save some installation support calls.
How should I warn? The BIOS doesn't tell the timing it chooses. Neither before nor after a video mode change.
From looking on google this is not an isolated problem. Hiding the default resolution chosen for the installation behind the F3 "other
How does the installer know it is a monitor capable of 1280x1024 in the first place? DDC? If so, this monitor can also communicate its "best" refresh for that resolution. I think the problem could have something to do with confusion over whether it is a CRT or LCD monitor because it is difficult to get sax2 to generate a good modeline for it, and it looks like that is because it is confusing it with a CRT monitor with a similar model number. (But this is just a guess by someone too busy to look closer at the problem.) In any case, monitors which can do interlaced video are becoming rare according to www.hwupgrade.com, so using it is probably asking for trouble in the first place. options" button probably is asking for trouble for new users who have not installed SUSE dozens of times already. (I have an older monitor which "lies" about how well it can do resolutions above 1024x768, so I have a long experience with changing resolution during install -- but in its case it will display up to 1600x1200, but just too fuzzily to put up with.) As an aside, Fedora Core 5 defaults to 800x600 for the install (ugly as sin, but foolproof.) Perhaps defaulting to a more conservative resolution and refresh would save your installation support staff some money?