Sabtu, 21 Juni 2014

GateWay DEsktop lcd Monitor display Problem?

Q. this occurred when i changed something in the bios settings..the color button for the monitor is orange, i have already tried another monitor(didnt work), power cables are tighten and i have bought new RAM 4g

Whats Wrong?

A. Well if the monitor turns on it you might have to change the graphics settings try setting them to the lowest possible (on the computer not the monitor) and it should let you use the monitor and then u should be able to see something on the display and log in and change your settings around to fit the monitor.

If that's not it and it doesn't turn on at all (the monitor) it is most likely the RAM. if your BIOS gives you a continuous beeping noise its most likely a card is lose. But if that's not it and you get another beep code try looking it up.

make sure you know what one u have and just google it or yahoo or just search it.

there are a few types but i can only remember phoenix off the top of my head.


Power savings on a bare bones desktop with lcd monitor?
Q. If I run a 400 mhz pc and drop the 3.5 flop and 2 cd roms, minimum ram and slow hard drive what power savings would I realize against a new full blown pc with crt screen? I know laptop would be the best route but i dont have one. I'm trying to drop my electric usage down to 200kwatts a month. expected electric cost, 25 bucks.

A. My 4-yr-old Dell desktop and old CRT monitor (that goes into power-save when not in use) used about 85-90 watts on average, as measured by my WattsUp meter. My power now costs about $0.11/kWh, for a cost of about $0.25/day. If I let it run continuously, my cost is about $7.50/ month (which was enough to encourage a lot me to shut down when possible). Also on the circuit are a printer that mostly stays in power-save mode and a power-cube for an external DVD-RW drive.

Your mileage may vary - I hope your cost of electricity is less than mine.

I don't think it makes much difference how the computer is equipped (mHz, drives, etc.) because you still have to keep the power supply juiced. Most computers in the past 4 years will give modest energy savings by shutting off unused equipment - that's the benefit of the Energy Star program and cross-over of control technology from the laptop world. There is LOTS more potential for energy conservation to make its way into desktops, but manufacturers haven't had much incentive beyond Energy Star. Their primary incentive is to keep desktop costs down, and the standard laptop components that reduce their energy consumption *are* more expensive (although that's due a lot to their small size).





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