- How do I adjust size of image to fill monitor.
- Posted by Frank Martin on January 11th, 2006
I have upgraded from a 19" CRT to a 19" LCD
monitor, but now I have trouble filling the new
larger screen with the previous contents.
There seems to be no way of gradually increasing
the size of the screen image gradually to fill the
new available space.
My old 19" CRT monitor was a NEC "AccuSync 90" ,
and the new one is a 19" LCD "Benq FP9/G".
The video system is "NVIDIA nView Desktop manager
V 105.32".
I have WindowsXPPro/Media centre2005.
Please help, Frank
- Posted by Malke on January 11th, 2006
Frank Martin wrote:
> I have upgraded from a 19" CRT to a 19" LCD
> monitor, but now I have trouble filling the new
> larger screen with the previous contents.
>
> There seems to be no way of gradually increasing
> the size of the screen image gradually to fill the
> new available space.
>
> My old 19" CRT monitor was a NEC "AccuSync 90" ,
> and the new one is a 19" LCD "Benq FP9/G".
>
> The video system is "NVIDIA nView Desktop manager
> V 105.32".
Go to the Control Panel Display applet and Setting tab. Use the slider
to set your resolution to whatever the Benq's native resolution is. It
is probably 1280 x 1024, but look in the Benq manual. Apply and OK.
While you're looking in the Benq manual, look for the explanation of
the monitor buttons. There will probably be one called "Auto Adjust".
After you adjust the Windows settings, you may need to push the Auto
Adjust button on the monitor.
Malke
--
Elephant Boy Computers
www.elephantboycomputers.com
"Don't Panic!"
MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User
- Posted by Frank Martin on January 12th, 2006
Thanks, but the screen adjustment in Windows has
only two settings and does not seem to be
infinitely variable like the old CRT monitor.
Frank
"Malke" <notreally@invalid.invalid> wrote in
message
news:eYshaCxFGHA.3176@TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl...
> Frank Martin wrote:
>
>> I have upgraded from a 19" CRT to a 19" LCD
>> monitor, but now I have trouble filling the new
>> larger screen with the previous contents.
>>
>> There seems to be no way of gradually
>> increasing
>> the size of the screen image gradually to fill
>> the
>> new available space.
>>
>> My old 19" CRT monitor was a NEC "AccuSync 90"
>> ,
>> and the new one is a 19" LCD "Benq FP9/G".
>>
>> The video system is "NVIDIA nView Desktop
>> manager
>> V 105.32".
>
> Go to the Control Panel Display applet and
> Setting tab. Use the slider
> to set your resolution to whatever the Benq's
> native resolution is. It
> is probably 1280 x 1024, but look in the Benq
> manual. Apply and OK.
> While you're looking in the Benq manual, look
> for the explanation of
> the monitor buttons. There will probably be one
> called "Auto Adjust".
> After you adjust the Windows settings, you may
> need to push the Auto
> Adjust button on the monitor.
>
> Malke
> --
> Elephant Boy Computers
> www.elephantboycomputers.com
> "Don't Panic!"
> MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User
- Posted by Admiral Q on January 12th, 2006
Did you install the driver for the Monitor itself? The NEC LCD's on all my
PC's (even the Linux one) has a driver to install to make it compatible with
windows and my video card.
--
Star Fleet Admiral Q @ your service!
Google is your friend!
http://www.google.com
"Frank Martin" <fm@general.com.au> wrote in message
news:%232zEBZxFGHA.3176@TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl...
> Thanks, but the screen adjustment in Windows has only two settings and
> does not seem to be infinitely variable like the old CRT monitor.
> Frank
>
>
> "Malke" <notreally@invalid.invalid> wrote in message
> news:eYshaCxFGHA.3176@TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl...
>> Frank Martin wrote:
>>
>>> I have upgraded from a 19" CRT to a 19" LCD
>>> monitor, but now I have trouble filling the new
>>> larger screen with the previous contents.
>>>
>>> There seems to be no way of gradually increasing
>>> the size of the screen image gradually to fill the
>>> new available space.
>>>
>>> My old 19" CRT monitor was a NEC "AccuSync 90" ,
>>> and the new one is a 19" LCD "Benq FP9/G".
>>>
>>> The video system is "NVIDIA nView Desktop manager
>>> V 105.32".
>>
>> Go to the Control Panel Display applet and Setting tab. Use the slider
>> to set your resolution to whatever the Benq's native resolution is. It
>> is probably 1280 x 1024, but look in the Benq manual. Apply and OK.
>> While you're looking in the Benq manual, look for the explanation of
>> the monitor buttons. There will probably be one called "Auto Adjust".
>> After you adjust the Windows settings, you may need to push the Auto
>> Adjust button on the monitor.
>>
>> Malke
>> --
>> Elephant Boy Computers
>> www.elephantboycomputers.com
>> "Don't Panic!"
>> MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User
>
>
- Posted by Malke on January 12th, 2006
No_Spam wrote:
> Did you install the driver for the Monitor itself? The NEC LCD's on
> all my PC's (even the Linux one) has a driver to install to make it
> compatible with windows and my video card.
>
You do not need to install monitor drivers in Windows. You don't even
need to do this in Linux. Frank, what do you mean "the screen
adjustment in Windows has only two settings and does not seem to be
infinitely variable like the old CRT monitor"? Where are you looking?
You change the resolution with a *slider*. I'm not talking about the
color (i.e., 32-bit). However, LCD's run best at their native
resolution. That's why you need to look in the Benq's manual for the
native resolution. If you don't have a paper manual, the manual is
probably on a CD that came with the monitor. Or go to Benq's website
for your specific monitor. You probably have the resolution set at
something odd.
Malke
--
Elephant Boy Computers
www.elephantboycomputers.com
"Don't Panic!"
MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User
- Posted by Frank Martin on January 12th, 2006
Thanks. I go to the "Display" in the Control
Panel and use the Settings tab.
Here the Screen-Resolution slider has only 3
settings, Vis:
1280x1024pix
1024x768pix
800x600pix
and it is not possible to adjust between these. (I
need something between the first two.)
If I go to the Advanced button I get the NVidia
settings which does not seem to help, because
there too there seems no infinitely-variable
slider adjustment.
Regards, Frank
"Malke" <notreally@invalid.invalid> wrote in
message
news:%23p5hRlyFGHA.2704@TK2MSFTNGP15.phx.gbl...
> No_Spam wrote:
>
>> Did you install the driver for the Monitor
>> itself? The NEC LCD's on
>> all my PC's (even the Linux one) has a driver
>> to install to make it
>> compatible with windows and my video card.
>>
> You do not need to install monitor drivers in
> Windows. You don't even
> need to do this in Linux. Frank, what do you
> mean "the screen
> adjustment in Windows has only two settings and
> does not seem to be
> infinitely variable like the old CRT monitor"?
> Where are you looking?
>
> You change the resolution with a *slider*. I'm
> not talking about the
> color (i.e., 32-bit). However, LCD's run best at
> their native
> resolution. That's why you need to look in the
> Benq's manual for the
> native resolution. If you don't have a paper
> manual, the manual is
> probably on a CD that came with the monitor. Or
> go to Benq's website
> for your specific monitor. You probably have the
> resolution set at
> something odd.
>
> Malke
> --
> Elephant Boy Computers
> www.elephantboycomputers.com
> "Don't Panic!"
> MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User
- Posted by Malke on January 13th, 2006
Frank Martin wrote:
> Thanks. I go to the "Display" in the Control
> Panel and use the Settings tab.
>
> Here the Screen-Resolution slider has only 3
> settings, Vis:
> 1280x1024pix
> 1024x768pix
> 800x600pix
> and it is not possible to adjust between these. (I
> need something between the first two.)
>
> If I go to the Advanced button I get the NVidia
> settings which does not seem to help, because
> there too there seems no infinitely-variable
> slider adjustment.
You want to set the resolution to either 1280x1024 or 1024x768. A 19"
LCD probably has a native resolution of 1280x1024. If you set the
resolution to something different than the native resolution, the
display will not look good. You can increase the size of icons, text,
etc. from the Display applet's Appearance tab>Advanced. Also, you can
see if you like Clear Type by enabling it under Effects.
Malke
--
Elephant Boy Computers
www.elephantboycomputers.com
"Don't Panic!"
MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User