This morning I attempted to purge and re-install nvidia driver. Updates and Software recommended nvidia-driver-525-open so installed that. Rebooted and back to original problem with resolution and undetected monitor.

So then I tried sudo apt-get remove --purge ubuntu-driver-525-open and got this in response: nvidia-driver-525-open is not installed. Then I tried sudo ubuntu-drivers install nvidia-driver-525 and got All the available drivers are already installed.


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I keep having trouble getting the correct monitor resolution - every time I reinstall, I happen to use a newer Ubuntu release and the old tricks I used to know no longer work. Instead of leaving a long trail of questions for every new release, I am looking for a more universal and timeless solution.

Note that steps 6 and 7 are not usually necessary; try skipping them and if that does not work, repeat all steps and include these two. Some monitors don't send EDID information to the computer, so Ubuntu can't know what the monitor is capable of and only offers safe (low) resolutions. Those two steps resolve that problem.

Click "Save to X configuration file". Here I had some difficulties with saving file, despite running nvidia-settings as root and trying to save in places I definitely had right to write.

Hello I have just installed tumbleweed. I am quite new to Linux and have followed everything as on guide while installing the drivers. When I use amd(integrated) gpu my screen resolution looks fine (as it should be) but when I change my bios settings discrete (I am not even sure if they will be switching automatically if I keep my settings on Dynamic!) my screen resolution drops a lot, in settings it says 1920 to 1080 but I think it is 1280 to 720, and I could not find any way to fix this so I am asking for help.

Thanks in advance.

First I got the log in screen in correct resolution, but it froze with a black screen showing the mouse cursor (frozen) directly after logging in. I fixed this by installing new Nvidia drivers, following answers here.

After rebooting I got the log in screen with low resolution (640x480). Logging in works fine, but the resolution is still low, and as a result I cannot see the whole screen. Changing resolution does not work: When entering display settings, it says 'Unknown Display', and the Resolution field is just empty and grey (literally no text or figures at all apart from the word 'Resolution'), and clicking it results in a small grey empty speech bubble appearing, but nothing happens.

The above answers are all partially correct. On Ubuntu 18.04, you should update to NVidia 435 or 440 drivers in order for the computer to boot properly. However, for some users (like OP) with outdated kernel versions, this will result in issues with the resolution settings & monitor inputs.

I noted that even the gui installation was buggy though. It hung on me several times, and I saw weird checker patterns appearing. Around about the third time or so, the installation managed to get all the way through, I guess going without gui would have been better. Afterwards, ubuntu-drivers recommended nvidia-435 instead of 440 as earlier. I installed them using ubuntu-drivers autoinstall, and now everything works fine.

Driver 390 also showed by me did worked since install off 18.04 till this week sudden it does not work anymore. nvidia-340 works perfect by me. Nouveau drivers also but they give not full use of device possibility .

I always have a crash repport nvidia-dkms-390.0.crash into /var/crash. Suspect an error during config and or build of module due to ...I do have card GeForce GT 440 and it should be ok with driver version.

I solved this trouble in Ubuntu 18.04 LTS relatively easily in this way: I updated the driver from 'Software & Updates', in the 'Additional drivers' tab. I selected nvidia-driver-440. It appears a progress bar, when it is over, I rebooted. After reboot, my resolution was higher than before, but not yet FHD resolution. So, I went to Settings-> Devices->Displays and now I can change the resolution to 1920*1080.

I have a fresh install of fedora on disk (no VM) of the latest version fedora 38 with KDE plasma.

Originally I was running my display with a native resolution of 3840x2560@60 off of my intel iGPU without any issue.

I verified that both generated grub.cfg files contain the resolution. I even added fake 40_custom entries to make sure I got the right file. Booting into grub my changes to 40_custom are visible so I guess it is working as expected.

However the modes file still only shows 800x600.

I have recently installed arch (so i will warn you i am no expert) and have a nvidia graphics card and driver. Its all working fine apart from the screen resolution - it is very zoomed in and poor quality. I had this same issue when installing ubuntu on the same computer, however as ubuntu is graphical all i had to do was go into control panel and change nvidia settings. Yes, i have looked at the arch wiki and googled it, but i couldn't find any relevant/working results.

You need to elaborate more, we know absolutely nothing about your system other than that you are dissatisfied with the resolution, what chipset is this, is this a laptop or a desktop, which environment are you starting?

Thanks for all the help. However, I am a bit of an arch noob, and I can't find a clear way to replace my driver easily. Does anyone know how I might replace my nvidia driver with nouveau or nvidia-340xx?

After updating and getting the Linux 6.1 instead of 5.15 as the LTS Kernel, Nvidia does not allow me to change my screen resolution. I am using a TUXEDO InfinityBook Pro 14 Gen7 with Intel Core i7-12700H and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3050 Ti. I have set it up to use Optimus Manager (with the Qt GUI) and I am using the latest dkms drivers (525.89.02). Because the display has a native resolution of 2880x1800 with 90Hz and Xfce does not properly support scaling (and if I use it, it gets pretty blurry), I always used a resolution of 1920x1200, which is clear enough for me and is also big enough for this pretty high resolution. But now, on Linux 6.1, if I change the resolution, I always get a black screen using my desktops display settings and even with xrandr.

AI upscaling is the process of converting lower-resolution media to a higher resolution by putting low-resolution images through a deep learning model to predict the high-resolution versions. To make these predictions with high accuracy, a neural network model must be trained on countless images at different resolutions.

The deployed AI model can then take low-resolution video and produce incredible sharpness and enhanced details that no traditional scaler can recreate. Edges look sharper, hair looks scruffier and landscapes pop with striking clarity.

The technology uses a deep learning network that performs upscaling and compression artifact reduction in a single pass. The network analyzes the lower-resolution video frame and predicts the residual image at the target resolution. This residual image is then superimposed on top of a traditional upscaled image, correcting artifact errors and sharpening edges to match the output resolution.

The deep learning network is trained on a wide range of content with various compression levels. It learns about types of compression artifacts present in low-resolution or low-quality videos that are otherwise absent in uncompressed images as a reference for network training. Extensive visual evaluation is employed to ensure that the generated model is effective on nearly all real-world and gaming content.

I do not have any options for screen resolution settings. It defaults to 2560x1440 @ 240hz on a 15.6 inch laptop display on X11 and Wayland sessions. Is this a feature, bug, or something that can be configured?

It maybe possible to instruct more modes to single nvidia mode, if you get/copy them from your hybrid setup Xorg log (/var/log/Xorg.?.log) and insert them in a Monitor Section, in a conf file at /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/, following some examples at Archwiki.

I've got two monitors connected to the same PC; one directly via DVI, the other through a KVM switch on a (blue) VGA cable.I just installed Xubuntu 11.10 on it, installed the current nvidia drivers, and using the NVidia X Server Settings applet, I've configured them. I'm using a TwinView configuration, so that I can drag windows from one monitor to the other, etc.

I reinstalled Zorin while Not selecting update third party drivers etc. Display monitor was detected as Ancor Communications 25', incorrect name but it enabled 1920x1200 using Nouveau driver (which is great). After I switched to nVidia Proprietary driver, Display Setting show "Unknown Display" and again, I lost full resolution and got stuck to 1600x900

I am using UnRaid OS version 6.9.1 and booting straight into GUI mode on the same stand alone machine. Additionally, I am using an LG 4k Monitor which is connected to an Nvidia 710 card via an HDMI cable and also have an Nvidia 1030 for my Ubuntu passthrough. The problem is my UnRaid OS GUI resolution makes everything on the display appear very big as shown in screen capture below:

I am adding the screen capture below which shows my VFIO PCI Log. The pink errors are associated to my 1030 card which is showing up missing after I installed my 710 card. The ERROR reads: "Vendor:Device #### not found at ####. Unable to bind device." One error is for the GPU and the other error is for the Audio on the GPU.

I explain why I want to create a custom resolution. It's for some old games with 4:3 aspect ratio. With my native resolution (when I plug with my TV) I have a stretched image in 1920x1080 for these games, and I want to have a no streched image, so in 4:3 and a resolution of 1440x1080 (or 1920x1080 with black bars on the sides). 006ab0faaa

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