Neither of them worked, unfortunately. <br>
<br>
Using the nv driver resulted in a slightly different version of the same problem. <br>
<br>
Perhaps it is a peculiarity in the transport stream from the cable box,
perhaps a newer video card would help. I guess I'll just keep
plugging away and see if I can figure something out. Thanks for
your help. <br><br><div><span class="gmail_quote">On 1/11/06, <b class="gmail_sendername">Brian Wood</b> <<a href="mailto:beww@beww.org">beww@beww.org</a>> wrote:</span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
On Jan 11, 2006, at 6:35 PM, Chris Ribe wrote:<br><br>> Sorry, I need a little hand holding here.<br>><br>> I assume I can unload the nVidia driver by issuing<br>><br>> #modprobe -r /lib/modules/2.6.14-1.1656_FC4smp/updates/drivers/
<br>> video/nvidia/nvidia-1_0-7676.ko<br><br>Or just "rmmod nvidia", "lsmod" will tell you if it's still there or<br>not.<br>><br>> but loading the nv driver, I'm not so sure about.<br>><br>
> Can I just replace the<br>><br>> Driver "nvidia" line in xorg.conf with, Driver "xv" and restart x?<br><br>Yes, normally, but I have heard tell of nVidia setups where it still<br>loads nVidia even if you do that. The actual X server is an
<br>executable usually linked to "X" (note the cap) someplace like /usr/<br>X11R6/bin (seems like everybody puts it in a different place.<br><br>That should be "nv" not "xv", I'm assuming that was a typo. "xv" is
<br>something completely different.<br><br>My guess is that if commenting out "load glx" does not work then<br>loading "nv" instead of nvidia will not work either, but you never know.<br>_______________________________________________
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