Edit your /etc/X11/XF86Config file and make sure you have "ViewPort 0 0" in
each of the Subsection "Display" areas for your video card. See below.
---snip
# The accelerated servers (S3, Mach32, Mach8, 8514, P9000, AGX, W32, Mach64)
Section "Screen"
Driver "accel"
Device "ATI
TheThingThatShouldNotBe wrote:
Thanks for the reply Jon.
unfortunately I don't know what a viewport is, so I
would not know how to set it.
Take a piece of cardboard bigger that your monitor
screen, cut a rectangular hole, 4" wide by 3" high
in it. Put the cardboard over your screen.
Thanks Steve!
I'll try that when I get home tonight!
I wonder if there is a way to mnake the Virtual
screen to ALWAYS the same size as the current screen
size...
Thanks again.
--- Steve Philp [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[snip]
If you know that you're not going to go back to
using the
On Thu, 23 Sep 1999, you wrote:
TheThingThatShouldNotBe Aboleth wrote:
Hi all,
Currently my monitor is set to a very high resolution
which works well, but it's only 17" and everything
looks kinda small.
Apparently the default Virtual Screen Size is maxed
out so that when I
Thanks for the reply Jon.
unfortunately I don't know what a viewport is, so I
would not know how to set it.
-Dan
--- John Aldrich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
[snip]
You can also go in and edit your /etc/X11/XF86Config
file
and change the "viewport" option to "0 0" from
whatever it
TheThingThatShouldNotBe Aboleth wrote:
Hi all,
Currently my monitor is set to a very high resolution
which works well, but it's only 17" and everything
looks kinda small.
Apparently the default Virtual Screen Size is maxed
out so that when I set the screen size down to
something that