- Jul 11, 2001
- 40,436
- 9,945
- 136
Over Xmas I visited my brother and went with his wife to Best Buy. I was going to buy my brother a new hard drive but she came along because she wanted to pick out a new LCD monitor that was to be her birthday present from my brother. She saw a Sony 18" but they didn't have them in stock and then she saw the Samsung 191T and decided that was the one she wanted. Turned out they were out of that too, so she ordered it online right in the store. It arrived after I left and they managed to set it up with her Windows 98 system.
Yesterday I called them and asked how the new monitor was working out. I was told that there was a problem - the picture wasn't very clear and she had bought a "filter". I asked what this was and my brother said it was something they put in front of the screen. I was appalled and said that wasn't the answer. I said I was afraid they weren't running the monitor at the native resolution of 1280 x 1024. I also said that they would probably get better results if they get a video card with DVI. However, I stressed that they should switch to the native resolution. My brother checked and found out she was running at 800 x 600! I said he should change it and he did to 1280 x 1024, but he said the picture didn't fill the screen and that there was up to 2.5 inches at the sides! So, he switched back to 800 x 600. I told him to look for the manual and figure out how to adjust the picture to the sides.
Today I call again and my brother said that the monitor went full screen after several minutes all by itself, perhaps 10 minutes. Anyway, it seems that his wife doesn't like the high resolution. Everything looks "very small". I said she should definitely be using a higher res than 800 x 600, that it's like looking at the world through a magnifying glass. I said she should try running at an in-between resolution for a little while and get used to that and then move to 1280 x 1024 - going one res change at a time wouldn't be such a shock. I said she'd eventually get used to the native resolution. She does a lot of computer work, mainly internet browsing, I think. She has good eyes, with glasses.
He changed to 1024 x 768 and said it looked very weird, that there were wavy lines, so he changed it back to 800 x 600. What can I do to improve this situation? I live about 500 miles from them or I would visit and see what I could do in person. I may be able to set up remote control software if I open ports on their cable router, but that's not really going to let me know what her monitor looks like. Suggestions and ideas appreciated!
Yesterday I called them and asked how the new monitor was working out. I was told that there was a problem - the picture wasn't very clear and she had bought a "filter". I asked what this was and my brother said it was something they put in front of the screen. I was appalled and said that wasn't the answer. I said I was afraid they weren't running the monitor at the native resolution of 1280 x 1024. I also said that they would probably get better results if they get a video card with DVI. However, I stressed that they should switch to the native resolution. My brother checked and found out she was running at 800 x 600! I said he should change it and he did to 1280 x 1024, but he said the picture didn't fill the screen and that there was up to 2.5 inches at the sides! So, he switched back to 800 x 600. I told him to look for the manual and figure out how to adjust the picture to the sides.
Today I call again and my brother said that the monitor went full screen after several minutes all by itself, perhaps 10 minutes. Anyway, it seems that his wife doesn't like the high resolution. Everything looks "very small". I said she should definitely be using a higher res than 800 x 600, that it's like looking at the world through a magnifying glass. I said she should try running at an in-between resolution for a little while and get used to that and then move to 1280 x 1024 - going one res change at a time wouldn't be such a shock. I said she'd eventually get used to the native resolution. She does a lot of computer work, mainly internet browsing, I think. She has good eyes, with glasses.
He changed to 1024 x 768 and said it looked very weird, that there were wavy lines, so he changed it back to 800 x 600. What can I do to improve this situation? I live about 500 miles from them or I would visit and see what I could do in person. I may be able to set up remote control software if I open ports on their cable router, but that's not really going to let me know what her monitor looks like. Suggestions and ideas appreciated!