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> Double Monitor Question, ^^
xJedix
post Apr 3 2006, 09:40 PM
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Alright, I got 2 monitors currently and I found that my brother left his old graphics card at my house. I was wondering if I would be able to run dual monitors with this. I don't know like anything about running dual monitors. Do you just need 2 monitors and 2 graphic cards? If thats the case, my current graphics card is a 32mb geforce2. My brothers old one I believe is some 16mb card. Will these work? or will their be conflicts because I believe they are different brands and also have different mb capacity? Also, I'm running windows 2000 pro. Will my os work with it?

if thats not the case, what else do I need? Thanks in advance smile.gif
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farmer
post Apr 4 2006, 12:25 AM
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I'm not an expert on this but, no, I don't think so.

I have 2 monitors but they are supported by my ATPI graphics card which is designed for dual monitors or using a tw set, etc.

I believe you would have to have such a card or perhaps there is software that can make that happen.

However, as I said, this isn't my field so I'll be watching for a better answer.
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xJedix
post Apr 4 2006, 12:54 AM
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hmm, thanks for the reply.... Just a little more info, maybe it will help. My current card is a 32mb NVIDIA GeForce2 MX/MX 400. The software thats installed with it talks about dual monitors. In some settings, there is one check box saying "Enable Dualview(Treat multiple outputs on an NVIDIA GPU-based card as seperate display devices)." And the software supports like multiple desktops that I can switch between.

Thanks again, and tell me if you need any more info to assist me in this.
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savge17
post Apr 4 2006, 02:56 AM
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From what I know it really only takes 1 graphics card, but the card has to have 2 slots for the monitor. Also using two monitors for games isnt such a great idea because it reduces the frame rate and equlaizes them throughout both of the monitors, otherwise for buisness or video production purposes it can be a great alternative.
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DogEater008
post Apr 4 2006, 03:11 AM
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actually.. .you need you buy two graphic card. .and a motherboard has to support it. .For example. .you need a mother board that has 2 AGP slots. Then most likely.. that mother board supports dual graphic card...

wait.. nvm. .that isn't right. .sorry for the wrong info.dual graphic means it uses two graphic card (one to process the upper half of the screen and the other one process the lower half)... But the cheapest way you could get dual monitor is.. to buy those spliter box that they used in stores to preview their mointors.. .

The dual screen view you're talking about is.. for a tv-out.. Graphic cards these days usually comes with either an a/v port or a s-video port out port. You could then plug it to your TV and use it as a second screen or extention to your desktop. This means you could drag window media player over to the TV screen and watch movies while chatting or browsing on your main screen. But make sure you have a fast computer so it doesn't lag whatever you're watching.

I have never seen a graphic card that supports more than two screens at the same time. Like my brother has a laptop that has a monitor port and a s-video port. You can only have two screen (including the laptop screen).
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fffanatics
post Apr 4 2006, 04:36 AM
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Well i actually am pretty sure that you can run both monitors using two graphics cards as long as the cards themselves support dual monitors. Most graphics cards do but they sound old so i would say just try it and see what happens. You never know you just might have the right kinds
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rvalkass
post Apr 4 2006, 09:34 AM
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I have a Radeon X600 from ATI, and in the Control Centre I have this screen (click here). I am sure that nVidia has something similar. It works by using two of the monitor ports on the back of the PC, one on the graphics card and one connected directly to the motherboard, using the integrated graphics. You then use the Control Centre to chosse what sort of monitor each one is, and set the settings for each one. You then have choices on what to idsplay on each one, and where they are positioned. For example, you can spread one image across both displays or have each monitor show entirely different screens and act like separate PCs. You can also tell it where each monitor is, if you split the image, so you can make an extra tall or wide desktop. nVidia's Dualview is something similar to the screen above, but it requires you to have two monitors attached to the same graphics card, using a splitter. If you have integrated graphics as well as a graphics card you should be able to use the method above. The integrated monitor port often has tape or a rubber bung over it, so you don't use it accidentally.
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Inspiron
post Apr 4 2006, 03:45 PM
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I don't think it is possible to connect 2 monitors that both uses the standard monitor port. You will need a monitor that supports S-Video input to work on multiple monitors simultaneously because your graphic card only can have 1 monitor plugged in as it cannot accept the other of the same plug.

I'm using a Dell notebook now that has an S-video output. Dell provided me with a S-video cable that splits into the typical red, yellow and white video and sound ports which can be connected to a normal television, a monitor that accepts video inputs or even a projector. I've tried connecting to my home television and watched a movie on it. I could have the movie displayed on both my notebook screen and the television simulanteously. In fact, whatever I am doing on my computer did showed up on the television when connected. That is one of the way where people are using to give presentations on projectors as it works the same way.

If you don't have a S-video port on your computer, then I don't think it will be possible to use your second monitor. The screenshot that rvalkass gave will work and configure when you have both your monitors connected to your computer. Otherwise the configurations like what the screenshot show will not render the usefulness because it's basically configures nothing.
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Joe2Chance
post Apr 4 2006, 06:27 PM
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I run 3 monitors at work it has one ATI dual VGA card in an AGP slot and one ATI single VGA card in a PCI slot, at home I'm running 2 monitors with two completely diferent cards and i don't have any problem with that, i think if you try you will be sucessful, just don't forget to set preferences for your new monitor in the Display control panel.

Ps: Did you know that Windows support ten monitors on a single PC? Just had two single video cards + one dual video card + two dual video cards!! laugh.gif Just imagine, TEN MONITORS!!!! blink.gif


Stay well.

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