<html><head><style> body {height: 100%; color:#000000; font-size:12pt; font-family:Arial;}</style></head><body>I don't think that is the problem. The windows<br>instruction manual lists resolutions up to 1920x1200@16bits<br>so it would not be a device limitation unless it is the linux<br>driver that introduces the limitation.<br><br>As I mentioned, I was able to get what appeared to<br>be 1280x768@16bit to run but the image was shifted<br>so I thought I might have the mode info wrong. I'll be<br>testing things with a real monitor and report more<br>fully from that.<br><br>Cheers,<br>Chris<br><br>----- Original Message -----<br>From: Martin Langhoff <martin.langhoff@gmail.com><br>To: chm@alum.mit.edu<br>Cc: devel@lists.laptop.org<br>Sent: Mon, 20 Dec 2010 14:30:27 -0000 (UTC)<br>Subject: Re: USB to VGA<br><br>On Sun, Dec 19, 2010 at 3:46 PM, Chris Marshall<br><jns-cmarshall@comcast.net> wrote:<br>> I was able to run the StarTech USB2VGA2 on<br>> an XO-1 with os359 installed. It came up<br>> at a resolution of 1024x768.<br><br>That's about the max that the USB2VGA hardware can handle. Also about<br>the max that the USB bus itself can handle! USB can't move that many<br>pixels.<br><br></jns-cmarshall@comcast.net></body></html>