On Tue, 2007-03-06 at 08:47 +0900, Carsten Haitzler wrote:
nothing has really changed regarding how e sees xinerama - if it gets
xinerama
info (i highly suggest you have it enabled) then it will treat each
screen
specially. that is exactly what it does here - as long as it gets the
xinerama
Running e17 on UBUNTU 6.10, dual 19 inch monitors using NVIDIA twinview.
Prior to upgrade today to cvs20070303-1, screens were managed as what I
consider two separate screens with knowledge of each other -- i.e.
i had two shelves set for middle of screen bottom orientation, this
put one shelf
Hi,
Sounds like Xinemera was enabled.
More an Xorg setting that E17
Don't use Ubuntu, so not sure how you would disable, but if you want to edit
the /etc/X11/xorg.conf file directly, you will find it in there.
Lucas
Reid Thompson writes:
Running e17 on UBUNTU 6.10, dual 19 inch
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ grep -i xiner /etc/X11/xorg.conf
Option Xinerama False
Option NoTwinViewXineramaInfo True
On Mon, 2007-03-05 at 10:34 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
Sounds like Xinemera was enabled.
More an Xorg setting that E17
Don't use Ubuntu, so not
With Option NoTwinViewXineramaInfo True, gdm login screen spans both
screens also
With Option NoTwinViewXineramaInfo False, gdm login screen is only
displayed on one monitor.
In either case at this point, maximizing windows spans both monitors and
e shelves span both monitors, rather than
Hi,
Ntt sure if this will help, but seems problem you have is experienced on
other display managers / desktops.
http://www.nvnews.net/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=85795
Maybe it would help to check all your TwinView settings.
http://www.ublug.org/ubuntu/twinview/twinview-howto-breezy.html
On Mon, 05 Mar 2007 12:52:38 -0500 Reid Thompson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
babbled:
With Option NoTwinViewXineramaInfo True, gdm login screen spans both
screens also
With Option NoTwinViewXineramaInfo False, gdm login screen is only
displayed on one monitor.
In either case at this point,