Bob: Your comments are extremely useful. However much I would like to get a newer graphics card, I am stuck with this one for a few weeks at least. It works well on an Ubuntu system on a different partition. How would you recommend to go about trying vesa. That may be what Ubuntu is doing. Turn on vesa framebuffer? I backed down to 1024xsomething: vertical lines were scalloped/wavy. Someone mentioned this would be a timing issue, but I don't know what I'd do to microadjust timing? xvidtune? I'll try it. Thanks again. Alan On 11/17/05, Bob Sanders wrote: > > > Have you tried just using - vesa? Or vga? It should work. Turning on > everything > is always a sure way to break a kernel. > > > > > Description: when scrolling the buffer, some lines are doubled, some are > > lost, and using Firefox at least, when I type Ctrl-L, the frame displays > > properly until it is scrolled again. I have found descriptions of > similar > > issues on the Inet, but nothing that has helped get my system to work > > properly. Does this symptom ring a bell with anyone? > > > > Generally, it's because the gfx card can't refresh from it's internal > memory fast enough. > As I recall, the Mystique had an optional memory module, which I have on > mine. Perhaps > its just that your trying to use too high a resolution and hitting the > cards performance > limits? > > With due respect, save up your pennies and get a current Gfx card. Should > be around > US$42. Sure, that's a months wages in some parts of the world. But still - > throwing a massively > powerful processor in a system with a dead-end Gfx card is kind of > wasteful, unless you're making > this thing into a server. > > Bob > - > -- > gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list > >