In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Jens B. Jorgensen
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes
>Groovy! I'm glad to be wrong. Several of my colleagues have new Dell laptops
Me too :-)
>sporting NeoMagic chips and lament their XFree86 support. With XFree86 you can
>only
>use the VGA16 server man does it look like
Groovy! I'm glad to be wrong. Several of my colleagues have new Dell laptops
sporting NeoMagic chips and lament their XFree86 support. With XFree86 you can
only
use the VGA16 server man does it look like crap!
Ian Lynagh wrote:
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Jens B. Jorgensen
> <[EMAIL PROTEC
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Jens B. Jorgensen
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes
>Unfortunately, SVGA does not stand for "standard VGA". SVGAlib, which is what
I know, but it does have a standard VGA mode.
Anyway, running ldconfig as someone else suggested has fixed it :-)
However, it's currently i
Unfortunately, SVGA does not stand for "standard VGA". SVGAlib, which is what
squake runs under, doesn't have support for NeoMagic because NeoMagic won't give
out technical info about their cards freely. There are commercial X Servers for
NeoMagic boards so maybe you could use xquake with one of th
This is a problem w/ your svgalib (the libc5 version). Apparently the
package is not running ldconfig like it is supposed to. As root type
'ldconfig'. This reloads your list of shared libraries. After this
squake should work. If not, please run 'ldd squake.real' in the
directory where squake.r
Hi all!
I am having a few problems :-(
Am I right in saying that my Neomagic video card should be able to
play games such as squake in standard VGA mode? Whenever I try to
run squake I get
Segmentation fault (core dumped)
although I can't find a core anywhere. How do I set this up?
Thanks in
6 matches
Mail list logo