April 2017

S M T W T F S
      1
2345678
910111213 1415
16171819 2021 22
23242526272829
30      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Thursday, May 17th, 2007 06:36 pm

I just got a new display for my desktop, an Acer AL2216W widescreen LCD. It has a native display resolution of 1680x1050. It's quite adequate, especially since it finally has me off of CRT, giving me a ton more desk space.

The problem is that the video card in my computer (that onboard Intel 950 described in the spec) doesn't have an internal mode for 1680x1050. But it can actually supoprt that resolution, it just needs to be convinced. Fortunately, someone clever has written a program which pokes the appropriate values into the appropriate places to convince this kind of video card that it supports resolutions it doesn't know it supports.

Unfortunately, I've already misplaced the link for the very nice walkthrough I used. But the little program is called 915resolution. It's as simple as running that with one line to overwrite a resolution you're not going to use (that's anything, with an LCD you want to be in native resolution anyway) with one you want to. This only affects RAM, so it has to be rerun every time you boot. That's good news, as it means you can't break anything permanently unless you try really hard.

Gentoo makes it even easier for you. The 915resolution package comes with a nice init.d script. Just drop an appropriate line into /etc/conf.d/915resolution, add it to whatever runlevels you need to, and you're good to go.

As for me, I'm enjoying my increased desk space (nearly 4 sq. ft.), my increased screen real-estate (453280 px), and not having to shove my face up to the screen and/or squint to read text in an XTerm at default resolution (a significant gain in effective screen space).

Friday, May 18th, 2007 04:47 am (UTC)
When I got my new laptop (with a intel 965 chipset) I was very frustrated that it would handle larger than 1680 x 1050, but not that precise size. I was also frustrated that 915resolution doesn't exist for windows. However, a couple months ago, intel updated their drivers to support 1680 x 1050 -- at least for my laptop. I know that intel releases their own linux drivers. So, you've probably checked already, but if you haven't double check to see if there is a newer driver available than what came with your distribution that can handle 1680 x 1050.