Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!clyde.concordia.ca!uunet!lll-winken!neoucom!wtm From: wtm@uhura.neoucom.EDU (Bill Mayhew) Newsgroups: comp.unix.i386 Subject: Re: vga help Message-ID: <1990Aug03.135635.8874@uhura.neoucom.EDU> Date: 3 Aug 90 13:56:35 GMT References: <4328@cocoa7.UUCP> Distribution: comp Organization: Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine Lines: 32 The Sony 1304 is an excellent monitor. I an very impressed with the engineering inside the monitor. The auto-size / auto-center is the best of any monitor that I have seen. One caviat is that the factory default for the auto-size vertical is 768 lines max. If you use 1024*800 VGA mode (such as on the Paradise VGA+/16 and similar VGA boards based on the WD chip set) you'll want to have a qualified technican adjust the internal vertical height; otherwise your screen will be overscanned about 10-15 lines at the bottom of the screen. If you don't use 1024*800 that much, the manual-height over-ride switch that is user-accesible on the left side of the monitor has more than enough lattitute to adjust the screen. The 1304 is also an analog-only monitor, but with VGA and 8514 video boards in abundance there is no reason to fret. I searched for a long time for a personal monitor, and the 1304 is the only one that satisfied me for picture clarity, geometry and power supply regulation. The 1304 pin-cushions less than any other monitor as average screen intensity varies. A good torture test for monitors is to set up a program that draws a white box that fills the entire screen then switch to a black box with a 1-pixel white border. Switch back-and-forth. Note if you see any picture pin-cushion or blooming at the edge of the box as you switch. The 1304 shows less than 1 mm of movement on this test. ==Bill== -- Bill Mayhew Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine Rootstown, OH 44272-9995 USA phone: 216-325-2511 wtm@uhura.neoucom.edu ....!uunet!aablue!neoucom!wtm via internet: (140.220.001.001)