We had a similar problem in my Department (Biological Sciences at Purdue
University) It turned out that there was a large (about 100 circut/220V)
circuit breaker box on the other side of the wall. We haven't gotten around
to measuring how strong of a magnetic field it was putting out, but our only
cure was to move the monitor as far from that panel as possible. You may
well just have some heavy duty AC wiring in your walls (or transformer boxes
somewhere nearby). If Thomas's suggestions below don't work out, just try
moving your monitor and repositioning your video cable.
on 4/13/00 7:52 AM, Thomas Ribbrock (Design/DEG) at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 08, 2000 at 08:57:00PM -0600, Dave Watts wrote:
>> One of the minor problems that I have continually had with Linux
>> (Redhat 6.1) is that the right side of my screen shakes. Regardless of
>> which windows manager I use it is the same.
> [...]
>
> My guess would be that X isn't tuned properly to your monitor (short of
> an acutal hardware fault in your monitor, that is). Maybe you can adjust
> that a bit using xvidtune ? (Use with care - wrong settings can damage
> the monitor).
>
> HTH,
>
> Thomas
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