1 |
Yes, but that wasn't the problem. I solved it in the last post here |
2 |
|
3 |
http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic-p-7081620.html#7081620 |
4 |
|
5 |
Christopher Lemire <christopher.lemire@×××××.com> |
6 |
Ubuntu 64 bit Linux Raid Level 0 |
7 |
|
8 |
Gnu Privacy Guard Key Fingerprint = 3E1A 9103 EF3D 4885 6866 E9DE C69F |
9 |
18B3 E13B 0909 |
10 |
|
11 |
Web: http://linuxinnovations.blogspot.com |
12 |
Jabber: recursivequicksort@××××××.org |
13 |
|
14 |
|
15 |
On Mon, Jul 9, 2012 at 7:10 AM, Tanstaafl <tanstaafl@×××××××××××.org> wrote: |
16 |
|
17 |
> On 2012-07-06 9:00 PM, Christopher Lemire <christopher.lemire@×××××.com> |
18 |
> wrote: |
19 |
> |
20 |
>> I tried disabling r128 and building the raedon driver into the kernel. |
21 |
>> However, I am getting the message raedon module not found. It's not a |
22 |
>> module. It's built into the kernel. Xorg.0.log. I mistakenly typed |
23 |
>> raedom, but then fixed it to raedon, so if you see that in log, I |
24 |
>> corrected it and tried starting X again. |
25 |
>> |
26 |
> |
27 |
> Actually, isn't it raDEon, not raEDon? ;) |
28 |
> |
29 |
> |