quote:
Originally posted by Centurian:
Hmmm ok well thanks for the info. To bad we will still have to restart X to change the refresh rate. I have all the monitor resolution setup no problem I was hoping we could change the monitor refresh rate and the desktop without having to logout or restart X.
I'm confused by your use of the term "refresh rate". Once set you should never have to change it, and it's something that is set automatically when it detects your monitor. There are only two things that anyone might want to change after installation. That is the color depth (e.g. change from 8 bit color to 24 bit color), and the screen resolutions (e.g. change from 800x600 to 1024x768). The former (color depth) requires X to be restarted. The latter (resolution) does not need a restart of X.
When would anyone have a need to change their refresh rate? The highest possible refresh rate would always be preferred in my opinion (as long as your highest rate is higher than the frequency of flurescent lights if you are working in a room with such lighting). What has always pissed me off about Windows is the default refresh rate is always set at the lowest (60 or 65hz) which is exactly in the range that will get you massive flicker in a room with flurescent lights and blow out your retinas if you sit in front of such a monitor for any length of time.
The first thing I do when I walk into a room and see someone's monitor flickering is to increase the refresh rate for them. I have never had this problem in Linux. It always picks a very high refresh rate. That is as long as it detects your monitor and you don't have to set this manually, and if you did have to set it manually you should have set the refresh rate at the upper bounds of the monitor at that point.
In the automatic detection of your video card it will detect all the clock rates (refresh rate frequencies) that the video card is capable of. In the automatic detection of the monitor it will take the upper/lower bounds that monitor is capable of and match that up with the highest clock rate of the video card not to exceed the upper bounds of the monitor.
Or am I completely misunderstanding your issue?
[ October 05, 2002: Message edited by: void main ]