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Re: Monitor Acceleration
Possibly?
Yes, I would think that a new monitor cable is a lot cheaper than a new
monitor, and would most likely solve your problem.
--
I Bleed Blue and Gold
GO BEARS!
"UrbanPioneer" <UrbanPioneer@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:B581DE8D-BE0B-47AB-B67C-A6C277687FD2@microsoft.com...
> My monitor has had issues for quite some time now. The only way I can keep
> it from EXTREME flickering is to set it to a low resolution, lower the
> refresh rate (I know it's supposed to be the opposite, but this is what I
> have to do), and turn off the monitor acceleration.
>
> On Vista, the troubleshoot page says that my driver won't allow changing
> acceleration settings. Huh? It's the same driver I've been using for 5
> years now!! I've always been able to turn off the acceleration on XP.
>
> Any suggestions on how to bypass this?
>
> p.s. When I installed this new computer, I noticed that a "pin" on the
> monitor cable was broken off. Could this possibly be causing this issue? A
> long shot, I know, but a lot cheaper than buying a new monitor.
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