7300 7500 7600 8500 8600 Video Driver
7300 7500 7600 8500 8600 Video Driver
Game Manuals · PDF
| Filename | 7300_7500_7600_8500_8600_Video_Driver.pdf |
|---|---|
| Size | 0.05 MB |
| Subsection | 7300 7500 7600 8500 8600 Video Driver |
| Downloads | 0 |
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7300/7500/7600/8500/8600 Video Driver http://web.archive.org/web/20060906210619/http://vision.n...
The Wayback Machine - http://web.archive.org/web/20060906210619/http://vision.nyu.e…
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7300/7500/7600/8500/8600 120 Hz
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about advice bugs changes contents download
October 2, 1997
hi nano
i just discovered another unexpected behavior in your Resolutions Control Strip,
which may be just another manifestation of the problem that Brian Stankiewicz
reported. I just bought a $4,500 grayscale monitor (the BrightView) that will synch
to almost anything. Supposedly it supports the new DDC "plug'n play" digital
communication standard. It has the fancy new DDC "plug'n play" 15-pin HD
connector. From Griffin, I bought an HD-15 to HD-15 cable and a "plug and play"
adapter. This works, but seems to identify the monitor as an old-fashioned 480x640
fixed-frequency monitor.
when i boot up my 7500/100 with your new video driver and this monitor (with the
Griffin adapter) and Mac OS 7.6.1, your new modified Resolutions control strip
offers only 480x640 67 Hz in roman type (recommended) and all the others
(including 640x480 120 Hz) in italic (at user's discretion). Apparently the boot-time
identification fails to identify my monitor as DDC-compatible.
If, instead, I boot up with my Apple 17" multisynch then I get offered the wide
range of resolutions I know and love. Since the Mac OS identifies the monitor type
only at boot time, I can, after booting, manually transfer the connection to my new
monitor (with the Griffin adapter) and everything works fine. Your control strip
offers me all the options, and they all work.
best
denis
September 16, 1997
Nano's new driver worked fine for me on my PowerMac 7500 running Mac OS 7.6.1
driving an Apple 17" Multiscan. (The image was about 0.5" to the left of center;
about 10 pixels were cut off at the left. This can be corrected by using the monitor's
horizontal offset adjustment.) Frans Cornelissen reports that the new driver and
control panel work fine on PowerMac 8600 running Mac OS 7.5.5 driving an Apple
20" Multiscan. Brian Stankiewicz says "I tested the new graphics driver on our
8500/150, and it worked fine with our Apple Multiscan monitor."
1 of 7 5/5/24, 6:18 PM
7300/7500/7600/8500/8600 Video Driver http://web.archive.org/web/20060906210619/http://vision.n...
Brian Stankiewi…
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