Device Driver Manager Debian Packages Mythtv
Today I installed amd64 to my laptop Asus but now I can see that the screen resolution is not as it should be the icons are too big and mouse works not exactly as expected etc I cannot find any manager which may help me to find out what devices are still required to have drivers etc. I remember the 'device manager' was in Windows XP which showed if device needs driver but what alternative Debian has?
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Or I need to install something additionally? If so please advice how? I don't have KDE so I've just tried to find the in gnome but I couldn't; it really absent in the sys tools. There is something wrong with version 7.6.0 or I just should install some additional packages? I found I have to turn-off my laptop manually cause of ACPI: Unable to load system description' on system boot my display is marked as 'Unknown' and I canot set any resolution:( Is there a way to install Linux mint 17 ddm (device driver manager) on Debian Wheezy?
When she had gone Mangita took Larina to task for her cruel treatment of a stranger; but, instead of doing any good, it only caused Larina to hate her sister all the more.Some time afterwards the poor fisherman died. Larina did not care, however, but laughed at her and mocked her as she painfully made her way again down the road. Mangita was mending a net and Larina was combing her hair in the doorway. This made Larina jealous, and the more Mangita was loved, the more her sister thought evil of her.One day a poor old woman came to the nipa house and begged for a little rice to put in her bowl. When Larina saw the old woman she spoke mockingly to her and gave her a push that made her fall and cut her head ona sharp rock; but Mangita sprang to help her, washed the blood away from her head, and filled her bowl with rice from the jar in the kitchen.The poor woman thanked her and promisednever to forget her kindness, but to her sister she spoke not a word.
I heard it supports gnome Please advice some really easy to use none-terminal (or a very detailed terminal commands) solution cause I am just studying this OS. If you're afraid of the terminal and don't know GNU/Linux at all, you should have started with a more user-friendly distribution (let' say Ubuntu). Generally if all devices work in GNU/Linux, you don't need any specific driver, except for the graphic card: because of licensing issues, the driver packaged by default is often the open-source one, which, in most situations, performs worst than the proprietary one. You should check your distribution's documentation for an HowTo install proprietary graphic drivers, and check if you have an NVidia or AMD graphic card (not needed for Intel). – Jul 24 '14 at 14:21 •.
Today I installed amd64 to my laptop Asus but now I can see that the screen resolution is not as it should be the icons are too big and mouse works not exactly as expected etc I cannot find any manager which may help me to find out what devices are still required to have drivers etc. I remember the 'device manager' was in Windows XP which showed if device needs driver but what alternative Debian has? Or I need to install something additionally?
If so please advice how? I don't have KDE so I've just tried to find the in gnome but I couldn't; it really absent in the sys tools.
There is something wrong with version 7.6.0 or I just should install some additional packages? I found I have to turn-off my laptop manually cause of ACPI: Unable to load system description' on system boot my display is marked as 'Unknown' and I canot set any resolution:( Is there a way to install Linux mint 17 ddm (device driver manager) on Debian Wheezy?
I heard it supports gnome Please advice some really easy to use none-terminal (or a very detailed terminal commands) solution cause I am just studying this OS. If you're afraid of the terminal and don't know GNU/Linux at all, you should have started with a more user-friendly distribution (let' say Ubuntu).
Generally if all devices work in GNU/Linux, you don't need any specific driver, except for the graphic card: because of licensing issues, the driver packaged by default is often the open-source one, which, in most situations, performs worst than the proprietary one. You should check your distribution's documentation for an HowTo install proprietary graphic drivers, and check if you have an NVidia or AMD graphic card (not needed for Intel). – Jul 24 '14 at 14:21 •.
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