On Fri, 2001-10-26 at 00:16, Arne Goetje wrote: > > No common. A Google search turns up this advice: > > > > http://archive.osdlab.org/debian-user/Jul-2001/4261.html > > yes... same problem... > my X is running in 16bbp...
That should be OK then? The problem seems to have been reported with 24bpp (I run at 24bpp and have no problem). Some more info: http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=en&th=eec33ddccdd992ed&rnum=1 > I cannot even get the acrobat window to choose the settings... is there any > default configure file where I can uncheck the anti-aliasing? acroread --helpall might give a clue: -visual <visual class> [depth=<depth>] -visual id=<visual id> -visual best -visual default Specifies a visual. In the first form, the visual class (specified by either its name or number) with an option depth determine the visual to use. In the second form, the visual id is specified. The prefix 0x must be used for hexadecimal numbers. The third form uses an internal algorithm based on depth and visual class. The fourth form simply uses the default visual. Note that PseudoColor visuals of depth greater than 8, and DirectColor visuals are not supported. Other possible solutions: * Change your X display depth and try again. * Do some searches on acroread and your display driver. Perhaps there is an incompatibility in the driver. That's about all I can suggest. If you don't find a solution (or you do and the Debian developers should know about it) file a bug report: http://www.debian.org/Bugs/Reporting And in the meantime use another PDF viewer such as gv or xpdf. Regards, Adam