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Date:      Sat, 19 Oct 2019 19:43:19 +0200
From:      Gary Jennejohn <gljennjohn@gmail.com>
To:        Miranda van den Breukelingen <mms.vanbreukelingen@gmail.com>
Cc:        freebsd-x11@freebsd.org, pete@nomadlogic.org
Subject:   Re: freebsd-x11 Digest, Vol 776, Issue 5
Message-ID:  <20191019194319.57d80560@ernst.home>
In-Reply-To: <ba6c6bef-324f-751d-4347-573190d6fdcc@gmail.com>
References:  <mailman.45.1571400001.53344.freebsd-x11@freebsd.org> <ba6c6bef-324f-751d-4347-573190d6fdcc@gmail.com>

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On Sat, 19 Oct 2019 17:20:58 +0200
Miranda van den Breukelingen <mms.vanbreukelingen@gmail.com> wrote:

[deleted extraneous text]
> The main problems are
> 
> a) still both GPUs are been recognized (not adjustable in UEFI BIOS and
> I can't take a laser sword cutting out the part of the motherboard,
> where GPU is situated, can I?
> 

If you really do have the ASUS PRIME B350M-A main boaard, as you
told me, then there is no GPU on the board itself.  I know,
because I have one.

Easy way to test that - unplug the graphics card, plug the cable
from the monitor into the correct port on the back and turn on
the computer.  If you see the BIOS output then you either have a
CPU with an integrated GPU or you have a different main board
with an integrated GPU.

-- 
Gary Jennejohn



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