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Apple Computing Products:
Running Windows on your Mac
screen width in parallels
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<blockquote data-quote="xinelo" data-source="post: 316758" data-attributes="member: 24756"><p>thanks cwa107, </p><p></p><p>well, I agree with you about linux handling screen resolutions in general, except perhaps for ubuntu, which, in my experience, was able to recognize my laptop's screen configuration perfectly, something in which all others (fedora, mandriva, linex, suse, etc.) failed. </p><p></p><p>anyway, thanks for the hint, i'll try to find out how to reconfigure my X (any recommendation?). </p><p></p><p>the funny thing is that when I click on the "full screen" button, ubuntu appears occupying the whole screen for one second, then it goes black and then it reappears in the way i described earlier (not large enough). </p><p></p><p>thanks and cheers! xinelo</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="xinelo, post: 316758, member: 24756"] thanks cwa107, well, I agree with you about linux handling screen resolutions in general, except perhaps for ubuntu, which, in my experience, was able to recognize my laptop's screen configuration perfectly, something in which all others (fedora, mandriva, linex, suse, etc.) failed. anyway, thanks for the hint, i'll try to find out how to reconfigure my X (any recommendation?). the funny thing is that when I click on the "full screen" button, ubuntu appears occupying the whole screen for one second, then it goes black and then it reappears in the way i described earlier (not large enough). thanks and cheers! xinelo [/QUOTE]
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Apple Computing Products:
Running Windows on your Mac
screen width in parallels
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