Could some one help me out? I tried putting in Fedora 7 as a download. it would not install. so I put Fc6 back in. When I rebooted all the font was very small, pages where half sizes,photos thumbnail size and smaller the delete on hotmail show 1/4 page icons vary small. so is there any help with this? Thanks. Oldtimer.
Art Giles wrote:
Could some one help me out? I tried putting in Fedora 7 as a download. it would not install. so I put Fc6 back in. When I rebooted all the font was very small, pages where half sizes,photos thumbnail size and smaller the delete on hotmail show 1/4 page icons vary small. so is there any help with this? Thanks. Oldtimer.
If all the desktop icons are also tiny, then go to system-config-display and choose a resolution with lower numbers such as 1024x768 or lower numbers.
Pete I did like you said but it dose not want to hold I had it at 800X600 it was set at 1600X1200. How can I get it to stay at the 800X600? Thanks Oldtimer.
On Mon, 2007-04-30 at 14:41 -0700, Pete Cull x2315 wrote:
Art Giles wrote:
Could some one help me out? I tried putting in Fedora 7 as a download. it would not install. so I put Fc6 back in. When I rebooted all the font was very small, pages where half sizes,photos thumbnail size and smaller the delete on hotmail show 1/4 page icons vary small. so is there any help with this? Thanks. Oldtimer.
If all the desktop icons are also tiny, then go to system-config-display and choose a resolution with lower numbers such as 1024x768 or lower numbers.
On Mon, 2007-04-30 at 22:25 -0500, Art Giles wrote:
Pete I did like you said but it dose not want to hold I had it at 800X600 it was set at 1600X1200. How can I get it to stay at the 800X600?
Gnome users, at least, can set a "preference" for the "screen resolution" that'll be used when they log in. I suspect KDE provides something similar, as well.
That does seem to stick (when choosing something less than maximum), compared to configuring X, which tends to automatically reconfigure at each boot time, unless you manually set a monitor.
One way to reconfigure X:
* Use CTRL ALT F1 to get to a text console. * Login as root. * Run "telinit 3" to stop X. * Run "system-config-display --reconfig" to start configuring X afresh. * Select a monitor type, pick a generic one if you can't find your own monitor. Also pick the highest resolution you want to be offered. "Okay" away the requester. * Run "telinit 5" to restart X and check whether the configuration worked. Sometimes you pick screen modes that won't work with you monitor. You should be able CTRL ALT + or - (that's the number pad + or -) to swap between some modes on the fly, to see what you're doing. * If it didn't work, go back to CTRL ALT F1, telinit 3 again, reconfigure X again with different options. Rinse, lather, repeat... * If it did work, go back to CTRL ALT F1 and log out. You don't want root left logged in. You should be able to get back to the graphical system with CTRL ALT F7 (might be F8, if you ended up running two X sessions).