That's because the /etc/X11 folder is owned by root, with permissions that only allow the root user to add/change/delete files within it. If you open up the terminal application, and enter:
sudo...
Type: Posts; User: zurkog; Keyword(s):
That's because the /etc/X11 folder is owned by root, with permissions that only allow the root user to add/change/delete files within it. If you open up the terminal application, and enter:
sudo...
Got it working! I've tried several methods, but #24 (paosms' post) got it to work. I used his edit to grub, and bapool's xorg.conf file, and my Ubuntu 10.04 box now boots cleanly without a monitor...