I tried ! But cvt was not giving good results; I would obtain terrible
displays and even feared that it would damage my monitor. At that time I
had Windoze in dual boot and did not have problems with my display. So I
installed Powerstrip, as recommended (I think) on a Xrandr doc page
("when everyth
Why did you have to use Powerstrip? Did cvt (or gtf) not give you the correct
modeline, or were you just not aware of those utilities?
cvt 1920 1080 60
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Thank you Daniel for the suggestion but it actually was a problem with
finding the proper xrandr modeline for the Samsung p2350 monitor. I used
the Windows program Powerstrip to find it, which is
"1920x1080" 148,454 1920 2008 2052 2200 1080 1084 1089 1125 -hsync
-vsync
For me it's :
xrandr --new
[Expired for xorg (Ubuntu) because there has been no activity for 60
days.]
** Changed in: xorg (Ubuntu)
Status: Incomplete => Expired
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Tit
Please test with a modern kernel and confirm this bug still exists in
moderen kernels: http://kernel.ubuntu.com/~kernel-
ppa/mainline/v3.12-saucy/
** Changed in: xorg (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Incomplete
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Ubuntu 13.04/Raring (and its 3.8.x kernel) only have very basic support
for Haswell. You should be using Ubuntu 13.10 or later (and Raring is
about to go EOL anyway). At the very least, run a newer kernel on your
Raring install so you have better modesetting support.
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