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FAQ

hi, about 2 days ago my lcd monitor turned a light blueish color, i can still see everything but it's quite annoying, i tried fixing it yesterday and it worked fine at the night but when i shut it down and turned it on again today, it turned blue again. What can i do to fix this? i already checked for the pins and none seem to be bent or broken.
It has to be a connection problem. Check to see that the cable is connected directly into your computer and not loose in anyway. It could also be a connection problem from the cable to the back of your monitor. If possible, try a different vga/dvi cable. If that doesnt solve the problem, the problem could lie in your monitor.
hi guys i am going to replace my old crt 17 monitor with a new lcd 19 monitor . I have two options HP and othe T monitor from samsung. which one is the best to buy i also have a budget of Rs 9000/- help me with this and also suggest other brand monitors if they are good enough . THanks in advance .
Neither. Splurge and get the 1800 dollar Mac 30-er. Its amazing.
How long is the normal service life of LCD?
The LCD panel itself does not emit light; it belongs to the backlight type display device. Behind the LCD screen, there is a backlight, LCD TV is to rely on the LCD panel on the panel "block" and "open" backlight lights, to restore the screen. It can be found that as soon as the LCD power is on, the backlight will start to work, even if the display is a full black picture, the backlight will remain in the same working state. Because the light transmittance of LCD panel is very low, the brightness of LCD TV should be reduced to the level of restore screen. The brightness of the backlight is at least 6000cd / m2. Backlight life is the life of LCD TVs, general LCD TV backlight life of more than 50 thousand hours. That is to say, if you use LCD TV on average 5 hours a day, the life of 50 thousand hours is equal to you can use the LCD TV for 27 years.
Because I'm thinking of getting an LCD monitor for my computer but why not just get an LCD TV and use it as my computer monitor among other things? Whats the difference?
Television sets, as mentioned, have tuners, and a lot of extra connections to go with them. They also get better resolution, being able to give you the true 1080 that everyone is lookin for. LCD monitors generally max out at 1440 x 900, and since they don't make 900 movies and shows, you would be limited to the 720 version of high-def viewing. I'm not saying that you can't find a 1080 monitor, they are just a lot more expensive. Speaking of price, televisions run higher than just a monitor, and you can always get a tuner card for the computer, thus eliminating the need for a tuner in the monitor. HDMI converters are extremely cheap, so no need to worry there.
This morning, when I turned on the computer, the monitor went on and on. It was not the flash of the indicator, but the flash of the screen. And a little flower screen. I checked the connection between the power and the video card. It should be all right. After about 1 minutes or so, it doesn't flash. It seems normal. Also, the screen looks very dark when the monitor flashes. Is it damp? The monitor is the new new computer that has been around for more than 1 months.
You can call the monitor manufacturers, I have encountered, is a fault display, after the repair recovery. I hope this is not a monitor fault. Another: graphics card failure may also produce such a phenomenon. Suggest, if conditional, can think of a way to change a monitor, test whether video card fault. For example, you double headed output, then display the output to the TV to see if it will blink. Will flash, that is, graphics card failure, will not flash, and that may be the largest display line and display, if you can exclude the display line failure, you can be judged as a display fault.
I have A Nvidia GT220 Full HD Compatible VGA card And I brought a prolink 2012w 20 LCD monitor and the box says HD readyBut when I Connect the monitor using Dual Link DVI cable Nvidia Control Panel says Your system is not HDCP (High bandwidth digital content protection )compatibleThen I try to select 1080p res. the Nvidia Control panel stuck Please Help ME.Is there Anyway to force Activate My VGA to send High Bandwidth Content To my monitor
yes the monitor is hd but only 720,,,,,,,which is classed as hd ready 1360 x 768 if it's wide screen max you need to get at least a 21.5 monitor to get full hd at 1920 x 1080
I own a BENQ FP7IE lcd flat panel monitor.
It sounds like you have a sticky button on your monitor. power down the monitor and with a fairly wet (WITH ALCOHOL) rag, wipe the buttons to flush out the source of the stick. Use a can of compressed air to quickly dry the alcohol
I changed the resolution of my screen to check out which one best fits my viewing but my LCD tv(what I use as my monitor) doesn't support it. It says Unsupported and now everything is black. I don't know how to turn things back to normal since I can't see a thing. I tried to restart my computer but everything is still black. Is there any shortcut key that I can use or something? I'm on Windows 7. Thanks!
Restart the computer, hold down F8 as it boots and then choose 'Start in VGA Mode' from the advanced boot options menu. Once it's up and running you can choose a display mode that your monitor supports. After you've got it running right click the desktop and choose 'Screen Resolution' from the context menu. Then click 'Advanced Settings' which is written in blue on the right hand side of the window that just opened. In the box that has now just opened click the 'Monitor' tab and make sure that the checkbox labelled 'Hide modes that this monitor can't display' is ticked. Edit: This is probably because you're using a TV instead of a monitor, a TV might not communicate with the graphics card to tell it which modes it supports. If you look on the TV manufacturer's website they might have a driver for your computer to use it, if so then your computer will know which modes are allowed.