Is this the Sony in your Sig? ATi are dreadful at providing support for their video cards under Linux
My laptop with X700 has a similar problem. The OSS radeon driver does not support the chipset and the screen just goes to sleep.
It sounds like Sax has detected the wrong monitor, or you specified too high a frequency for it. The older 9000 series should work ok with the OSS driver though...
Try running sax2 from the command line with either:
sax2 -l (that is lower case L... This forces it to run at 640x480 and you should then be able to select a monitor and resolution combination that work with your monitor.)
sax2 -r (this should do a reset and make Sax2 re-read the hardware and come up with a suggested configuration)
sax2 --vesa 0:1280x1024@60 (forces Sax2 to use the Vesa mode you specify, change the resolution or the scan rage (@60) to suit your monitor specifications, you should then again, as with the -l above, be able to select a valid monitor combination.)
If sax2 goes into a blank screen or "frequency out of range", do alt+ctrl+backspace to reset the X server, if you are starting Sax2 it should drop you back to the command prompt and if you doing a test after configuring which doesn't seem to work, it should drop you back to the main Sax window.
more on
Sax2
I hope that helps you. If you want to look at installing the official ATi drivers, I have written a howto guide on the official openSUSE wiki for the Acer laptop, but the instructions are the same for most ATi cards...
Clicky
BTW, if you plan to use Linux on a regular basis, think about swapping an nVidia card, nVidia support all GeForce cards up to and including 7800's in SLI format. ATi support 3D upto the 9000 series, the Xn00 series can, eventually be made to use 2D, but ATi believes their Mobility Xn00 series are incapable of 3D acceleration for some reason, and I think you'll be incredibly lucky if you can find a X1n00 card which even supports 2D




