I've been having some odd problems over that last several months. Every so often - sometimes several times every day, sometimes weeks go by - the monitor would blank out off-and-on repeatedly every few seconds. Most of the time, pulling the power cord or video cable from the monitor, counting to five, and plugging it back in would make it go away for some time - sometimes only minutes but sometimes days or weeks. I've never really had a handle on the root cause or a permanent solution. Yesterday it was frustratingly frequent. I've also been having a couple other odd issues (random lockups and initramfs failures at reboot) that I am unsure about if they are hardware or software related. This morning, my computer would not power on, it would cycle on and off for a minute or two then stop.
Since I was already having video problems, I removed my nVidia card, pulled an HDMI cable out of the box of wires (I was using Display Port with the nVidia card) and plugged it in, and the computer fired right up. The proof in the pudding is still not evident but, as of right now, all seems normal. I'm hopeful all the problems were related to the video card.
Right away a couple of differences:
Apparently, since I am not able to use the Display Port, the refresh rate is set at 30hz vs. 75hz. I will probably not notice the refresh rate until I do some gaming. The few desktop effects I use seem to have no ill effects. I'm curious where the rate limitation is restricted. The monitor is HDMI 2.0 and the built-in video is Intel 530 which should support 60hz. Maybe I just need to change a setting somewhere. The resolution is 3840x1600 (WQHD+) and my understanding is HDMI will support a max of 60hz at this resolution.
The desktop fonts are obviously, but only slightly smaller. I increased the font one point and now it's slightly larger than before. Not sure if this is related to refresh rates or cable/connection type or video driver. I can live with either, it will just take a little time to get used to.
The larger issues are what was the root cause of the screen blanking and possibly the lock-up and initramfs issues? I will be interesting to see if any or all the problems go away, and if they do, do I just stick with Intel video and forgo replacing the card?
Also, if anyone has a suggestion on how to bump the refresh back up or other tips, I'll listen. I've been an nVidia user for decades and have little experience fine-tuning Intel graphics.
Since I was already having video problems, I removed my nVidia card, pulled an HDMI cable out of the box of wires (I was using Display Port with the nVidia card) and plugged it in, and the computer fired right up. The proof in the pudding is still not evident but, as of right now, all seems normal. I'm hopeful all the problems were related to the video card.
Right away a couple of differences:
Apparently, since I am not able to use the Display Port, the refresh rate is set at 30hz vs. 75hz. I will probably not notice the refresh rate until I do some gaming. The few desktop effects I use seem to have no ill effects. I'm curious where the rate limitation is restricted. The monitor is HDMI 2.0 and the built-in video is Intel 530 which should support 60hz. Maybe I just need to change a setting somewhere. The resolution is 3840x1600 (WQHD+) and my understanding is HDMI will support a max of 60hz at this resolution.
The desktop fonts are obviously, but only slightly smaller. I increased the font one point and now it's slightly larger than before. Not sure if this is related to refresh rates or cable/connection type or video driver. I can live with either, it will just take a little time to get used to.
The larger issues are what was the root cause of the screen blanking and possibly the lock-up and initramfs issues? I will be interesting to see if any or all the problems go away, and if they do, do I just stick with Intel video and forgo replacing the card?
Also, if anyone has a suggestion on how to bump the refresh back up or other tips, I'll listen. I've been an nVidia user for decades and have little experience fine-tuning Intel graphics.
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