Date: Wed, 12 Nov 2008 04:21:51 +0800 From: "Intron is my alias on the Internet" <intron@intron.ac> To: Robert Noland <rnoland@FreeBSD.org> Cc: freebsd-x11@freebsd.org, freebsd-ports@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Another VIA UniChrome/Chrome9 Driver Message-ID: <courier.4919E960.00013786@intron.ac> In-Reply-To: <1226433523.16065.1.camel@squirrel.corp.cox.com> References: <courier.49199C4C.00010EA3@intron.ac> <1226418439.10032.2.camel@squirrel.corp.cox.com> <courier.4919BA9B.00012041@intron.ac> <1226424409.10032.6.camel@squirrel.corp.cox.com> <courier.4919E02F.00013304@intron.ac> <1226433523.16065.1.camel@squirrel.corp.cox.com>
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Robert Noland wrote: >> You may see the mysterious phenomenon here: >> >> http://ftp.intron.ac/tmp/openchrome.avi (1.9MB) > > Is that with the xorg driver? An xorg.log might be helpful. > > robert. > >> Play the video file with MPlayer. >> >> My laptop + OpenChrome 0.2.903 = A space alien's visit ? The mysterious phenomenon is produced with the port xf86-video-openchrome-0.2.903. Here is the log file: http://ftp.intron.ac/tmp/openchrome-Xorg.0.log It ended when I pressed Ctrl-Alt-BackSpace. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ From Beijing, China
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