If it can be avoided, I would prefer not reinstalling the whole distro. It is dual booting with vista, sharing a data partition.
Essentially what would be the best, quickest, easiest, and least time consuming process to get back up and running AND help get a fix so this doesn't happen to other people who upgrade to the beta or release candidate. On 3/25/09, Gaetan Nadon <mems...@videotron.ca> wrote: > I am not familiar enough with development on Linux to guide you through > the easy way of doing this. Keep in mind you will now have to maintain > the new object code you created, it will most likely break on the next > update of xorg or kernel. Everyone will have a different opinion on > this, I think installing nvidia.com driver would be considered by most > as a lower level of difficulty compared to compiling. > > I would read-up on both ways before making a decision. Neither solution > is officially supported by Ubuntu, your best avenue for support is the > forum, which often has proven to be gold. > > Have you tried to delete xorg.conf and reboot? From what I understand, > at least the vesa driver should give you a desktop. Given that it works > on live cd, you can't be that far from a working solution. You could > also reinstall, having backed-up your data first. All depends on if/why > you need to be on an alpha version. > > -- > -nv reports it does not support GeForce 9100M G > https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/333040 > You received this bug notification because you are a direct subscriber > of the bug. > -- -nv reports it does not support GeForce 9100M G https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/333040 You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu. -- ubuntu-bugs mailing list ubuntu-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs