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Got a new Viewsonic va1930wm 19" WS LCD monitor. It says best resolution (native) is 1440 x 900. It also lists 5 other supported resolutions. None of those (especially the 1440 x 900) is an option in display settings in Win XP.
The 1st two supported resolutions listed by Viewsonic are 1440x 900 & 1280x1024. The highest 2 listed in display properties are 1280x960 & 1152x964 (sorry, no match - board goes back!). None of the other resolutions in windows match ones listed by Viewsonic either.
My graphics (integrated) chip and drivers are Intel. I'm pretty sure I have the latest drivers - just installed in '05. Don't think Intel's gonna have more updated drivers for a P-3 Intel MB.
What to do? Get a new graphics pci / AGP card? Call Intel / Viewsonic - ask if they'll write me some special drivers? Tell wife "This computer's a POC - must have new one"? Seriously, any OTHER suggestions?
Thanks all. Happy holidays.

Normally you don't need new drivers because XP provide it. If it doesn't, you can download it from this page & install it on your machine.
Before you do the above, get the
user's guide first. (you will need to enter the serial number).
i_XpUser

Thanks! YOu think that user's guide is different than the .PDF user manual included on the installation CD?

XpUser,
Yes, I installed the drivers, or at least what it said were drivers and other software. Didn't help in my case. The original Intel drivers were still there. I did call Viewsonic, and they said there should be some on their web site that'd fix it. So far, their server has been down.Anyway, that's where it stands now. I'll see what they've got & if it works. Thanks all.

OK, you are using onboard video. Which shares your RAM.
How much RAM are you sharing with your onboard video? (BIOS setting)
You clearly dont have the (shared memory) capacity to run 1440 X 900.
Go into BIOS and increase the amount of shared RAM to your onboard video.
Rich Gu

Thanks RichGu,
Haven't found a way (yet) in BIOS to change settings for video mem.
There is a connection port on my MB for Digital Video Out (DVO), though it's not clear to me exactly how / when it would or if it could be used, in my case to hook up the LCD monitor w/ digital vs analog (currently using analog).
I did find the following on Intel's website about my MB & the integrated graphics chip. My MB is D815EEA2, and the GMCH is 82815.
NOTE it mentions up to 1600x1200 for Progressive Scan Monitor and a DVO for 1280x1024 res for a DDP non-scaler digital flat panel.
From DATA SHEET:
82815 GMCH Integrated Graphics Support
The GMCH includes a highly integrated graphics accelerator. Its architecture consists of dedicated multimedia
engines executing in parallel to deliver high performance 3D, 2D, and motion compensation video
capabilities. The 3D and 2D engines are managed by a 3D/2D pipeline preprocessor allowing a sustained
flow of graphics data to be rendered and displayed. The deeply pipelined 3D accelerator engine provides
3D graphics quality and performance via per-pixel 3D rendering and parallel data paths which allow each
pipeline stage to simultaneously operate on different primitives or portions of the same primitive. The
GMCH graphics accelerator engine supports perspective-correct texture mapping, trilinear and
anisotropic Mip-Map filtering, Gouraud shading, alpha-blending, fogging and Z-buffering. A rich set of
3D instructions permit these features to be independently enabled or disabled.
For the GMCH, a Display Cache (DC) can be used for the Z-buffer (textures and display buffer(s) are
located only in system memory). If the display cache is not used, the Z-buffer is located in system
memory.
The GMCH integrated graphics accelerator’s 2D capabilities include BLT and arithmetic STRBLT
engines, a hardware cursor and an extensive set of 2D registers and instructions. The high performance
64-bit BitBLT engine provides hardware acceleration for many common Windows operations.
In addition to its 2D/3D capabilities, the GMCH integrated graphics accelerator also supports full
MPEG-2 motion compensation for software-assisted DVD video playback, a VESA DDC2B compliant
display interface and a digital video out port which may support (via an external video encoder) NTSC
and PAL broadcast standards and (via an external TMDS transmitter) digital Flat Panel or Digital CRT
displays.
1.8.1. Display, Digital Video Out, and LCD/Flat Panel/Digital CRT
The GMCH provides interfaces to a standard progressive scan monitor, TV-Out device, and TMDS
transmitter. These interfaces are only active when running in internal graphics mode.
• The GMCH directly drives a standard progressive scan monitor up to a resolution of 1600x1200
pixels.
• The GMCH provides a Digital Video Out interface to connect an external device to drive a
1280x1024 resolution non-scalar DDP digital Flat Panel with appropriate EDID 1.2 data or digital
CRTs. The interface has 1.8V signaling to allow it to operate at higher frequencies. This interface
can also connect to a 1.8V TV-Out encoder.Anyone care to put this in lay terms?

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