I can get into gmail, Jess.
'Objects In Space'
Buffistechnology 2: You Made Her So She Growls?
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Huh. I've been getting a "Server Error: Gmail is temporarily unavailable. Cross your fingers and try again in a few minutes. We're sorry for the inconvenience." message all morning.
(And yes, I've cleared the cache and restarted the browser. A few times. [eta: sorry if this sounded snippy -- just trying to avoid the inevitable "Did you clear your cache?" x-post])
I got in just fine.
I finally got in, after 4 hours of server errors. Sadly, nobody was trying desperately to get in touch with me.
For ita and other interested folk:
re: Viewsonic VX2000 LCD DVI monitors -
an incompatibility exists between VX2000 series monitors and NVidia 52xx and 56xx video cards when connected via DVI.
Apparantly the Windows driver has a workaround, but Linux users are SOL:
Known WINDOZE XP workaround: After many calls to Viewsonic I was able to get through to a sane engineer. He was able to reproduce the problem and found a workaround in Windows. That workaround was to change the timing from "Auto" to "DMT" (Discrete Monitor Timing) and to enable Horizontal Cloning. After that was done the card seemed to remember those settings and I could leave it on the DVI connector and actually be able to see my text consoles and POST screens etc...
Doesn't really help me, as the Mac Mini uses "ATI Radeon 9200 with 32MB of DDR SDRAM with AGP 4X support"
ita, what graphics card are you using?
Doesn't really help me, as the Mac Mini uses "ATI Radeon 9200 with 32MB of DDR SDRAM with AGP 4X support"
What version of the ATI Radeon driver are you using, Tommyrot?
If the Mac Minis have been sitting in a warehouse, they might not have the November update: [link]
The issue is probably related to two different styles of digital signaling used in digital displays. Tom's Hardware discusses it here in reference to various video cards you can buy and how well they work with digital displays. In particular, this page discusses the differences.
What version of the ATI Radeon driver are you using, Tommyrot?
I'll check when I get home. I've been poking around at the ATI site myself.
Apparantly there's the "ATI Displays control pannel" that I should have (Unless I don't have it because the graphics chip is built-in and not an add-in card?)
I should be able to install that new driver, right? I mean, it shouldn't make any difference that the graphics chip is built-in, and not a card, right?
Oof, good luck, Tommy!
Question for y'all: Just got a warning in the mail that the warranty on my Powerbook is about to be over, and did I want to buy the extra two years of AppleCare? It's $350, which seems like a heck of a lot, but I suppose if the thing goes to hell, would seem cheap. So, um, do people think it's necessary? I'm the sort of person who tends to not go for that, and worry about problems if/when they come, but....
The drivers you download from ATI's website are only for cards you buy at retail. Apple delivers updated drivers for the built-in and bundled cards as part of system software updates.