On Tue, 2006-03-28 at 13:22 -0500, Max H. wrote: > Rodrigo Barbosa wrote: > > > > It might be, but is your screen capable of that resolution ? > > > > This might also (very likely, actually) be a modeline related problem. > > In that case, you are in for some pain. > > > > Yeah, I'm sure my screen is capable of this resolution, because the spec > page I'm looking at is for my particular laptop model. These are specs > directly from IBM. Technically IBM says the display is capable of > 2048x1536 at the maximum, and 1280x1024 is listed as well. > > If it's going to be extremely difficult to get it working, I'm not sure > it's worth the pain to me. Thanks. > > Max > <snip> Perhaps... After it's booted run X config and see what it'll go for? Then you end up with somethings like this in your xorg.conf Section "Screen" Identifier "Screen0" Device "Videocard0" Monitor "Monitor0" DefaultDepth 16 SubSection "Display" Viewport 0 0 Depth 16 Modes "1600x1200" "1280x1024" "1024x768" "800x600" "640x480" EndSubSection EndSection It may be that you have to boot into the lower res but can get higher res after modules are loaded? Or modify initrd to include a needed module? HTH BILL -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: This is a digitally signed message part URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20060328/37e61762/attachment-0005.sig>