I'm used to messing around with xrandr and stuff to fix display issues. I didn't know Fedora still included X11 other than XWayland, but good to know I still have the option of falling back to that. Last edited by PowerSponge 18th April 2021 at 02:54 AM. You might want to go into Gnome display settings and switch so the main monitor is the horizontal one. The only other things I can think of is if its Gnome rotation has the problem for you for some reason so 3rd party rotation software for that, finding some way to change it via terminal, or trying with X11 since Wayland is default and might provide a difference. That's a bit of a kicker since changing versions isn't exactly a thing though it could be done to some extent. The Intel driver I believe is supplied by the kernel or its this here. Is there any way to get this working yet?Indeed, it works for me with Nvidia proprietary and hdmi though I don't have my 2nd display hooked up at the moment to try that. I'm thinking the problem is the Intel GPU drivers. I'm having to tilt my head sideways to write this post. They both work fine on Windows 10, but on Fedora only the HDMI display is detected, and it refuses to allow me to set it to a vertical orientation. Basically, I have two displays hooked up, one via HDMI and the other via DisplayPort, and one of them is vertical. I really can't afford a graphics card right now, and I don't do a lot of gaming anyway. So, I just built a new PC, and I'm having a lot of problems with the integrated graphics.
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