Minggu, 24 November 2013

How to secure flat panel monitor better?

Q. I just bought two 22" LCD monitors on put them on my glass desk. I have a keyboard tray with my keyboard and mouse on them. Whenever I type, the monitors shake because of the cheap keyboard tray. Even when I put the keyboard on the glass where the monitors are sitting they still shake. Anybody have any ideas as to how to secure them better so they don't wobble around when I type? It's annoying!
Yes, they "clicked in" when I put them together. I can't believe they wobble so much.

A. first of all are they secure in their individual stands? you might want to double check that. i put mine on a lazy susan so i can easily turn or move but it also gave it more stability.


I want to connect 3 LCD monitors i in a Single Computer. Pls advise How & what is cable specification PLS hlp
Q. want to connect 3 LCD monitors i in a Single Computer. Pls advise How & what is cable specification PLS hlp
The type of Cable and the maximum length

Thanks

A. The people who have answered are all complete idiots, with no understanding about anything. So let me simplify this for you..

Unless you want to spend $300 to buy garbage, the Matrox Triple Header ToGo, then use my method. The MTH is a piece of garbage - it tricks your computer into thinking you are only using 1 monitor, and splits the signal into 3 different ones. You sacrifice a ton of quality, and I can almost guarantee you your computer will not be able to support it.

There are multiple things you can do depending on what kind of video card you already have, and the motherboard of your computer. If your computer supports AGP, it will most likely support only PCI (not PCIe, the 'e' meaning 'express'). If so, buy an AGP card that has dual DVI output (almost every video card these days has that), and then buy a regular PCI video card (NOT PCIe). You can connect your two monitors via DVI to your AGP video card, and the third monitor to the PCI video card. The rest is software configurations in Windows Display manager. If your monitors are VGA (if they are CRT monitors, a.k.a. not LCD flat panel monitors), then you will need to buy a VGA to DVI convertor for each CRT monitor. If all your monitors are flat panels, you do not have to worry about this.

If your computer does not support AGP, then it supports PCIe and PCI. Buy a PCIe card with dual-DVI support, and either another PCIe video card or another PCI video card - they can be as crappy or as high-end as you want. The rest remains the same.

Almost all modern video cards will support 2 monitors each. However, there are no motherboards that are still being produced that support more than 2 AGP cards. Therefore, you can have two times as many monitors as your computer can support video cards, assuming each video card has dual output. However, Windows XP has a cap at 10 monitors; I believe Windows Vista increases this cap. If not, I believe there is a patch you can find on Google that will allow you to support more than 10 monitors on Windows XP.



All you other idiots need to learn before you spew off garbage.





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