I have run the following commands, as it said on the link you passed me @stevecook172001:
xrandr --newmode "1360x768_60.00" 84.75 1360 1432 1568 1776 768 771 781 798 -hsync +vsync &&
xrandr --addmode VGA-1 1360x768_60.00 &&
xrandr --output VGA-1 --mode 1360x768_60.00
…but I can’t figure out if this has changed something in my system. My resolution stays the same.
Also, the example that was shown on the link that you gave me I think that it wasn’t for a traditional Ubuntu system. At some part they use ‘gksudo’ instead of ‘sudo’ to edit a configuration file that doesn’t exists on my Mate.
How did you run it?
Also, i don’t know if the resolution is the problem because with the old driver my resolution was the same as now and it was perfect.
I’ve run inxi -G
command after and before of changing my driver and this is what i got:
—BEFORE CHANGING DRIVER—
iGraphics: Card: VIA CN896/VN896/P4M900 [Chrome 9 HC]
Display Server: X.Org 1.18.3 drivers: fbdev (unloaded: vesa) Resolution: [email protected]
GLX Renderer: Gallium 0.4 on llvmpipe (LLVM 3.8, 128 bits) GLX Version: 3.0 Mesa 11.2.0
—AFTER CHANGING DRIVER—
Graphics: Card: VIA CN896/VN896/P4M900 [Chrome 9 HC]
Display Server: X.Org 1.18.3 drivers: openchrome (unloaded: fbdev,vesa) Resolution: [email protected]
GLX Renderer: Gallium 0.4 on llvmpipe (LLVM 3.8, 128 bits) GLX Version: 3.0 Mesa 11.2.0
As you can see, my resolution did not change, just the frequency.