![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)
Also, thank you for continuing to support Bibletime. See my post here.
Kudos,
![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)
Jim
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nomodeset pfix=nox
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xorgwizard-old
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nomodeset pfix=vesa
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fatdog nomodeset pfix=nox savefile=none
I have a ASUS MSN2-SLI Deluxe board with a PCI-e nVivia 250 card.kirk wrote: ...To boot with Xorg using the Vesa driver, which usually means you're out of luck using the included open source drivers:I'll check on manually setting the vesa resolution.Code: Select all
nomodeset pfix=vesa
There is no such thing as a "64-bit drive". Instead, you should refer to them by their filesystem type. They are probably NTFS.frankge wrote:I am trying to find out about the security and accessibility of windows 7 64-bit drives
If you click on any other desktop icon, you will see the same Locked option. It refers to the behaviour of the icon itself, not to how the drive is treated.Clicking on said icons, mounted or unmounted, then right-clicking "edit item", a "locked" check box appears.
Neither.Does it lock the win 7 drive only in linux or does it carry over to windows?
Here is a trick to make NTFS partitions read-only in Fatdog.Are there other methods available in fatdog64 to limit acces of windows drives?
Yep, xorgwizard-old is broke, I haven't used it for ages. Fatdog64 by default runs without an xorg.conf. We really don't want use a xorg.conf file. So I think we'll do away with xorgwizard and xorgwizard-old. Xorg determines which resolution to use based on the EDID data from the monitor, so if monitor doesn't report EDID data or reports it in correctly, Xorg has to guess about the resolution. For non vesa drivers (drivers that are xrandr compliant) resolution can be set with xrandr or the Display Properties in the control panel. I'll fix the pfix=vesa boot option to make an entry in /usr/X11R7/lib64/X11/xorg.conf.d/. That's where want to make changes to Xorg. Thanks for reporting this.At prompt ran xorgwizard-old.
Next problem, tried this with and without graphics card, and never succeeded in configuring much of anything. I keep getting the defective report screen with resolution and refresh rates missing at the end.
Maybe, you'll need to find out if your card supports vesa modes of that resolution and if your monitor supports that resolution. You can look in /var/log/Xorg.0.log or run ddcprobe, which will list both. Then you'll need to make a file, /usr/X11R7/lib64/X11/xorg.conf.d/20-gpudriver.conf:Can I get VESA to go beyond 1024x768 in FATDOG? If so, how?
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Section "Monitor"
Identifier "Monitor0"
EndSection
Section "Device"
Identifier "Device0"
Driver "vesa" #Choose the driver used for this monitor
EndSection
Section "Screen"
Identifier "Screen0" #Collapse Monitor and Device section to Screen section
Device "Device0"
Monitor "Monitor0"
DefaultDepth 16 #Choose the depth (16||24)
SubSection "Display"
Depth 16
Modes "1024x768" #Choose the resolution
EndSubSection
EndSection
Menu > Control Panel > System > Fatdog64 Savefile ToolHorst wrote:Now i'm trying to find the program to resize pupsafe file.