![]() I haven't tried my desktop with nVidia card in it, but the consensus seems to be that with nVidia a simple registry change does the trick. In the case of my previous HP notebook with ATI graphics, once I installed Omega (3rd party) drivers, I was able to get everything working by choosing a checkbox on one of the Omega drivers pages. You're right, for all three graphics vendors this monitor was presented a challenge to some extent. What settings are you using in the DTDCalculator? Does the result show up as a selectable (1920x1200) resolution, or does it fail to show up at all? So is the driver too smart for its own good? A 3.5 year old HP laptop with an old ATI card can handle this and the latest Intel one cannot? I still have some hope that I can get this working, any suggestions/insights are greatly appreciated.īased on the thread you cite, looks like people are having problems with this monitor across the board (all three graphics vendors, to some extent). I'm running the latest version of the driver which is 7. Those are suited for televisions but I'm using a digital monitor rather than a television therefore, I do think that the problem is with the driver since it should be sending 1200p signal. For the former the monitor reports getting 480p signal and for the latter - the 1080p signal. When modifying my monitor settings, I can choose either Full or Original display when connected in HDMI mode. It seems that some other people are having problems with Intel graphics and this monitor as seen here I've tried searching the web for any possible links on how to fix that. The image is not being fully displayed like I described in a thread here: What happens when I connect using DVI-HDMI cable is that the Intel driver thinks that I connected a digital television rather than a monitor - that's what I see when I bring up Intel Graphics Media Accelerator Driver for mobile, and look at Display Devices tab. I do get it working using the VGA connection however, the image quality is noticeably worse than the digital one. However, with this new Dell notebook, I cannot get the DVI-to-HDMI connection (via the docking station) to work properly. ![]() The HP notebook had an ATI graphics card. I was successfully using this monitor with my old HP laptop + docking station connected with DVI-HDMI cable, and getting full digital 1920x1200. I also have a 24" LG monitor that has VGA, HDMI and component connections. I've got a new Dell notebook (E6400) with GMA 4500MHD. They still might not work with your monitor, but we can at least try them.I hope to be able to find an answer here as I've been unsuccessfully searching (and hacking the registry) for the past couple of weeks. Also see if any of them don't show up in your list of modes: it's possible that Toshiba is locking one or more of them out of your BIOS, in which case we can tweak them to avoid the lockout. Well, unfortunately, I couldn't find an exact match to your monitor. I'll be out of town for about a week, and not near the Net much, but I'll check in when I can. ![]() I'd mess with the first hex digit (83), tweaking it up and down a bit to see if your monitor will accept variations on it. The final DTD (5) is 1432x900, which should get around any Stupid BIOS Tricks Toshiba is playing on you, but your monitor may still not like the timings. Even if your monitor may like them, Toshiba's BIOS may still forbid them. ![]() The first four might work, or might not, depending on the unknown timings of your monitor. HKR, DTD_5, %REG_BINARY%, Generic plus Hack to deal with BIOS HKR, DTD_3,%REG_BINARY%, DTD_4, %REG_BINARY%, Generic HKR, DTD_2,%REG_BINARY%, elsewhere on web That said, here are some DTDs I've come up with based on some stuff I've found on the web for AOC in general, if not your monitor in particular: We can get around this, but only by cheating (use 1432x892 and you may have some blank pixels on the edges, but the 1440x900 restriction will be gone). This is in the BIOS, but since I don't know specifically which model Satellite A105 you have (the sub-model number determines which BIOS to use), I can't be sure. A couple of possible issues I want to warn you about before you start: your laptop may be specifically excluding 1440x900 as an allowable resolution. ![]()
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