hi there i was curious what would be the needed items to make a 3rd monitor as a extended! i have a dual 9500gt 1gb vid card and i have one more that is integrated onto the desktop. i was wondering if i can use the integrated one as 3rd output for the video sources. is it possible? i'm trying to think and come up with a solution but i'm not sure how it's done
i have a question actually.. how can i make a desktop go dual screen even? my dad said its not possible. I have dell inspiron e5200.
I don't think that is going to work, mixing graphics cards with integrated ones. Maybe someone else has a different opinion on that. Anyway, check out this thread for some ideas. Uhhh, how about starting your own thread ? At least wait for the TS to get an answer before you hijack his/her thread ... lol
yea... that has nothing to do with the question i was asking! but yea i thanks for the information about that about mixing with it. thanks for the addition information! umm... mine me asking you if it's a slim model or a regular one?
your will need a video card has two output ports (VGA + DVI) and inside windows u can right click destop, properties and attach the 2nd monitor and check extend the desktop option
not sure if this fits what the thread starter is looking for http://www.matrox.com/graphics/en/products/gxm/th2go/
Asus EAH5450 SILENT/DI/1GD3(LP) THE ATI Eyefinity technology ensure that you on one HD5000 serial GPU' s to three display devices can connect. Using the ATI Catalyst Control center, easily already you can you fence to arrange and to establish, so that you can act on more efficiently and deeper your games can dive.
There are really only two things required to run multiple monitors on today's modern PCs. The first is either a graphics card that has two monitor ports or two graphics cards inside of a computer system. And of course, you will also need all of the monitors that you wish to hook up to the computer as well. No special software is really required as all of the major operating systems including Windows, Mac OS X and Linux can support multiple graphics cards and monitors. Some graphics cards may come with some additional software to run that expand upon the basic spanning and cloning features found in the operating systems.
right now only options is tri-mon which is a switching hub u connect all 3 monitors too. Or go with ATi's newest graphics card that support eyefinity which has 4 ports to connect monitors to.