Since you have Win95 installed on it, you could install EnTech's Powerstrip and then under Advanced Options, select Monitor confguration. If you look under Monitor type, it displays the Horizontal and Vertical frequencies there. Just plug those in for X and you should be ready to go. -Jeremy -----Original Message----- From: Jonathan Hutchins [mailto:hutchins@opus1.com] Sent: Monday, May 14, 2001 9:27 AM To: kclug@kclug.org Subject: Old Hardware Rant Sorry, it wasn't LJ, it was Linux Magazine in February, reviewing Merilus Gateway Guardian. They open with this blah about how this is a great use for "a pile of old 486 machines sitting around", but then recommend a minimum of a P266 with at least 64M. I recently set up a new PC to replace an old 486, and installed both Windows95 and Mandrake 7.2. I had no problems with the install or setup of either, but when I delivered the machine it would run just fine under Windows 95 at 800x600x24b (may have been higher but I'm sure of that), but would not run X-windows at any resolution on the existing monitor. The monitor is some discount brand 15" three to five years old, and there's no chance at all of ever finding a sync rate table for it, so I guess that system will run Windows until and unless a different monitor is found. (Yeah, I know, I could walk through a table of possible sync rates tweaking the config file and testing each possibility, and I'd probably find something that would at least run 640x480, as if that were any good for X. But it's not mine, it's not at my house, and I don't have three or four hours to put into a $500 system.) At a shop where we had some fairly decent older Compaqs that were running NT, and would have been fine for Windows 95, I tried Mandrake, Redhat, Storm,and Turbo Linux CD installations. Most of them failed at the point where they tried to go into the Graphical install on all of the machines through the P200's. None of them completed successfully. That means the average consumer couldn't even install Linux on a name-brand PC as recent as three years old. Pretty pitiful.