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On 20/12/12 17:15, bad apple wrote:
Nope, can't do that. I can't install any Mint (14 is what I want). I have no screen. And even if it has booted successfully without me being able to see it, I can't get at the install package. There is no display. And I don't think I can SSH into a computer running a live disk.On 20/12/12 16:52, George Parker wrote:Thank you everyone but no joy yet. Doing cnt alt F6 or cnt F1 does nothing because I don't have a display. It's not that I have a blank display, the monitor is not synced, it is not receiving a recogniseable signal. Removing the quiet and splash options does not help. I get a few pages of text and then the monitor goes blank, the green light goes yellow signifying no signal. Likewise adding VGA=791 or any other number results in the same failure. But it does seem to boot OK, not that I can see it. I think the boot sequence is switching to some graphic mode that radeon doesn't like (as suggested by Bad Apple I think.) I installed Kubuntu, which worked, but I didn't like it (fussy aren't I) and I'm now trying Xubuntu, but I hate the ads I keep finding. I like Robs idea of trying a graphics card and I'll have a root in the attic when I get the Xmas lights. I have read the thread started by Tom and I couldn't see anything that could help. He too resorted to Xubuntu it seems. I really do want Mint. I think I'll write to the Mint community now. I've had a trawl and there isn't anything on there.. yet. GeorgeSorry chief, I completely ignored your previous request about defending Debian and just posted a massive screed doing exactly that anyway :] But back to your problem, this is definitely fixable, so let's get to it. You can actually install Mint all the way through correct? If you can, then we just need to make some minor modifications to it post-install, as obviously your graphics hardware is preventing you interacting with it at all to fix the errors. We are going to need the command line I'm afraid, so I hope you have another computer to read instructions from whilst you're fixing the new one. The process will go something like this (full step by step instructions to follow once we have a bit more info): Install Mint fully Reboot holding shift to access grub2 boot prompt Select recovery mode to get a basic text console Remount / partition in r/w mode for fixing Get network operational Fully update packages, add optional repo for better driver support Install fglrx and probably updated xorg packages Reboot Profit! The whole process following the initial install should only take about 5 minutes. So, just to make sure: what is the exact hardware again, and exactly what version of Mint are you aiming to get functional? Cheers Now that I'm running Xubuntu, maybe I could put the iso on the hard disk and set up Mint on another partion? |
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