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I have a Intel Graphics card. I have just bought a new tv with the capability to connect to my computer so I can view my desktop on it. I put my tv to the primary moniter and I set the size of the screen to low for it. When i hit accept it says on my tv screen format not supported. but i can not acept another one when it is connected to my computer because my screen goes black because the tv is the primary moniter. If unplug it from the tv it will go back to the computer but i can not edit the tv settings on the computer. Can i possible reset my driver's settings?

2007-10-12 10:13:15 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Computers & Internet Hardware Monitors

I have a Intel Graphics card. I have just bought a new tv with the capability to connect to my computer so I can view my desktop on it. I put my tv to the primary moniter and I set the size of the screen to low for it. When i hit accept it says on my tv screen format not supported. but i can not acept another one when it is connected to my computer because my screen goes black because the tv is the primary moniter. If unplug it from the tv it will go back to the computer but i can not edit the tv settings on the computer. Can i possible reset my driver's settings? This is a SYLVANIA flatscreen. This has nothing to do with the driver. I just set the wrong setting but i can't reverse them so i need to reset my driver

2007-10-12 10:27:21 · update #1

It is a new acer laptop with vista

2007-10-12 10:33:28 · update #2

4 answers

If you can take your computer down to 640x480, you can try connecting it to your TV. Many laptops actually include an "s-video" out for exactly this purpose. Depending on your laptop it may be treated as a mirror of your laptop display, or as a second monitor, or you may be able to switch between them. You will quickly see that the quality of the display is, likely, very very poor.

If S-video is not an option, there are converter boxes available from places like Radio Shack that will take a standard VGA connector and turn it into a composite video signal that can be plugged into a TV with a composite input. In general this results in roughly the same poor quality computer display.

Surprisingly, in both of those cases, video playback can actually look quite good. What I mean is that if you're using your TV as a computer monitor and to do typical things like reading email or surfing the web, you'll be quite disappointed. However if you are playing back a video - say playing a DVD in your computer and watching it on the monitor - it seems to be quite acceptable. My theory is that most DVDs and other videos are targeted at exactly the TV's resolution, and that, plus the fact that for video we're "used to" that resolution, our expectations for that type of display are simply met.

Oh, and as to using it as a second monitor - to mirror what's going on on your primary computer screen: many laptops support using both the internal LCD screen and the VGA (or S-Video) output at the same time, so you may be able to simply hook it up. If you don't have that option, you'll need to get a splitter of some sort that will allow you to take your computer's monitor output and send it to two different devices: your regular computer screen, and a VGA converter box as I described above. Alternately you could purchase a video card that supports TV-out, or supports dual screens.

Now, there is salvation on the horizon, but it'll require a new TV. Newer TV's are going digital, and many do, in fact, have digital (DVI) input - particularly those that are High Definition (HD) ready. In these cases you actually stand a chance of being able to connect your computer directly to the TV. The TV may not support the same higher resolutions that your computer monitor might, but they'll almost certainly support resolutions that are much more acceptable for computer usage.

2007-10-13 10:17:04 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Hi. Your GPU software will allow you to change which display is primary. Then each can be set from the computer.

2007-10-12 10:23:18 · answer #2 · answered by Cirric 7 · 0 0

Old computer new tv,,,,try either updating your video driver or installing a new video card one that's current

2007-10-12 10:22:06 · answer #3 · answered by boscowood 4 · 0 0

if the producer had meant so you might place a usb stick in, the port does not have been hidden interior the returned. It likely is barely for help get admission to, not for taking part in media. study the handbook that got here with your television.

2016-10-22 04:41:39 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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