** Description changed:

  Older Sony Vaios have 2 graphics adapters, usually one from Intel and
  one from nVidia (e.g. on the Vaio SZ650N, there is an Intel GM965 and an
  nVidia GeForce 8400M GS), which you can select with a hardware switch
  when the notebook is off.
  
  Ubuntu supports acceleration of both chips with open source (Intel) and
  proprietary (nvidia) drivers, but installing both means that the 3D
  setup gets clobbered.  The current workaround is to have two xorg.conf
  files, one for each adapter, a couple of backed-up 3D libraries and a
  script that selects the right combination.  The script in its current
  state is specific to particular nvidia driver versions (even a minor
- version change would break it), so is limited, but does work.
+ version change would break it), so is limited, but does work, at least
+ on Hardy (Jaunty is proving more difficult to configure).
  
  see http://doube.org/hardy-vaio.html#video and http://doube.org/jaunty-
  vaio.html#video for details.

** Attachment added: "lspci from session with intel GM965"
   http://launchpadlibrarian.net/26060197/lspci_intel.txt

-- 
3D acceleration broken on Sony Vaios with dual graphics adapters
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/367941
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