With other peripherals – Philips 200BW8EB-27 User Manual

Page 7

Advertising
background image

step by step to optimize image performance with your system's video

controller.

Q:

How do LCDs compare to CRTs in terms of radiation?

A:

Because LCDs do not use an electron gun, they do not generate the same

amount of radiation at the screen surface.

RETURN TO TOP OF THE PAGE

Compatibility with other Peripherals

Q:

Can I connect my LCD monitor to any PC, workstation or Mac?

A:

Yes. All Philips LCD monitors are fully compatible with standard PCs, Macs

and workstations. You may need a cable adapter to connect the monitor to your

Mac system. Please contact your dealer/retailer for more information.

Q:

Are Philips LCD monitors Plug-and-Play?

A:

Yes, the monitors are Plug-and-Play compatible with Windows® 95, 98, 2000

,

XP

and Vista.

Q:

My monitor has no picture when connect to DVI-I w/ analog signal on the PC via DVI-D

SUB cable after startup PC. What should I do?

A:

Try to change to DVI-I w/ digital via DVI cable and re-startup PC. DVI-I

standard basically combines both analog and digital in single connector. The

monitor also contains two types of analog and digital EDID. Digital EDID will set

as the default and analog EDID will automatically change refer to analog signal.

This is likely that your PC read EDID type before making decision to send

analog or digital from DVI-I port. However, this compatibility limitation is rarely

found on PC, workstation, or Mac.

Q:

What is USB (Universal Serial Bus)?

A:

Think of USB as a smart plug for PC peripherals. USB automatically

determines resources (like driver software and bus bandwidth) required by

peripherals. USB makes necessary resources available without user

intervention. There are three main benefits of USB. USB eliminates "case

anxiety," the fear of removing the computer case to install circuit board cards --

that often requires adjustment of complicated IRQ settings -- for add-on

peripherals. USB does away with "port gridlock." Without USB, PCs are

normally limited to one printer, two Com port devices (usually a mouse and

modem), one Enhanced Parallel Port add-on (scanner or video camera, for

example), and a joystick. More and more peripherals for multimedia computers

come on the market every day. With USB, up to 127 devices can run

simultaneously on one computer. USB permits "hot plug-in." No need to shut

down, plug in, reboot and run set up to install peripherals. No need to go

Advertising