Bug 80336
Summary: | The Bluecurve icon theme has blurry menu icons | ||
---|---|---|---|
Product: | [Retired] Red Hat Raw Hide | Reporter: | Alexander Farley <afarley> |
Component: | redhat-artwork | Assignee: | Havoc Pennington <hp> |
Status: | CLOSED RAWHIDE | QA Contact: | Brian Brock <bbrock> |
Severity: | medium | Docs Contact: | |
Priority: | medium | ||
Version: | 1.0 | CC: | garrett, michael |
Target Milestone: | --- | Keywords: | Triaged |
Target Release: | --- | ||
Hardware: | All | ||
OS: | Linux | ||
Whiteboard: | |||
Fixed In Version: | Doc Type: | Bug Fix | |
Doc Text: | Story Points: | --- | |
Clone Of: | Environment: | ||
Last Closed: | 2003-01-30 06:02:11 UTC | Type: | --- |
Regression: | --- | Mount Type: | --- |
Documentation: | --- | CRM: | |
Verified Versions: | Category: | --- | |
oVirt Team: | --- | RHEL 7.3 requirements from Atomic Host: | |
Cloudforms Team: | --- | Target Upstream Version: | |
Embargoed: | |||
Bug Depends On: | |||
Bug Blocks: | 79579 |
Description
Alexander Farley
2002-12-24 17:43:44 UTC
Can you provide some details about your font display setup and your monitor/card combination? For example, my workstation has a LCD flat panel display. By default, Red Hat Linux configures X to have a 75Hz vertical refresh - which causes some things to be blurry. When I change to 60Hz vertical refresh, the display is crisp (as it should be). I am using a Compaq P920 Monitor (Horizontal 30-110 kHz Vertical 50-160 Pixel Clock ~ 280 MHz) with an ATI FireGL 2 graphics card at 1600x1200 resolution. I am using the default font (Sans) with best shapes, grayscale smoothing, and medium hinting. I do not think that the bluriness is related to the graphics display/X per se, as all other icon themes are "in focus" as expected. Even the icons that are not supplied by the Bluecurve icon theme are sharp when the Bluecurve theme is used (e.g. the main menu icons). It is almost as if the icons being used are the 16x16 or 32x32 icons instead of the 48x48 or 64x64 (I think these are the correct values) that are normally used, and thus when enlarged are out-of-focus. This should have been fixed for a while now. |