I'm confused. While I know that is no surprise to many of you, there is probably good reason this time. I want to get an external monitor for my HP laptop for two reasons: preserving the existing LCD monitor on the lappy, and providing a larger high-resolution area for doing photo editing. I haven't looked at specs for new hardware in years, and am surprised at how litttle information is presented, or I should say, how little useful information is buried in the volumes of marketting info on the OEMs' web sites. For example, my HP has an Nvidia GeForce FX Go5700 graphics card. It's been ages since I've looked at graphics cards specs to choose a compatible monitor and there always used to be some sort of a listing of frequencies and resolutions the card supported. I can't find that for this card. I do see some references to frequencies, but nothing that shows me what monitors it will work with, and the only resolution is the ubiquitous "native resolution" numbers that seem to indicate what the cards and monitors are comfortable running at. I've looked at tons of sites for spec's, downloaded lots of PDF files, visited technical review sites, and none of the information gives me any useful information for chosing a monitor. Has the method of specifying compatibility changed in the past few years, or does on just make a guess, build a configuration and hope for the best? Does anyone know if this card will support 1600 x 1200 monitors, or even more horizontal resolution in wide-screen monitors? Or better yet, point me to a man page where I can read and understand this black magic. Thanks, Jim
Jim Sabatke wrote:
For example, my HP has an Nvidia GeForce FX Go5700 graphics card. It's been ages since I've looked at graphics cards specs to choose a compatible monitor and there always used to be some sort of a listing of frequencies and resolutions the card supported. I can't find that for this card.
Doesn't your HP laptop specs tell you what the supported resolutions and frequencies are?
Has the method of specifying compatibility changed in the past few years, or does on just make a guess, build a configuration and hope for the best?
I think most modern monitors and graphics cards are so flexible that you'll only run into problems in the most extreme circumstances.
Does anyone know if this card will support 1600 x 1200 monitors, or even more horizontal resolution in wide-screen monitors? Or better yet, point me to a man page where I can read and understand this black magic.
The card is probably OEM'ed for HP, which is why you should be asking HP. If it *is* OEM'ed, Nvidia could well deny it ever existed, or at least refuse to release any specs on it. /Per Jessen, Zurich -- Let your spam stop here - http://www.spamchek.com
participants (2)
-
Jim Sabatke
-
Per Jessen