About Monitors???

I was wondering i havent bought a mac yet and i am a college student. i am looking to buy just the hardrive will it be able to hook up to a Dell monitor and key board

Hello, Jaclyn. You are in that part of the Discussions Forum which discusses the Discussions. I suggest you go to the Apple Store website and look at the MacMini. There is also a forum dedicated to that computer.
Good Luck

Similar Messages

  • The Problem about Monitoring Motion using PCI-7358 on LabVIEW Real Time Module

    Hello everyone,
    I have a problem about monitoring the position of an axis. First let me give some details about the motion controller system I’m using.
    I’m using PCI-7358 as controller and MID-7654 as servo driver, and I’m controlling a Maxon DC Brushed motor. I want to check the dynamic performance of the actuator system in a real time environment so I created a LabVIEW function and implemented it on LabVIEW Real Time module.
    My function loads a target position (Load Target Position.vi) and starts the motion. (Start.vi) then in a timed loop I read the instantaneous position using Read Position.vi. When I graphed the data taken from the Read Position.vi, I saw that same values are taken for 5 sequential loops. I checked the total time required by Read Position.vi to complete its task and it’s 0.1ms. I arranged the loop that acquires the data as to complete its one run in 1ms. But the data shows that 5 sequential loops read the same data?

    Read Position.flx can execute much faster than 5 ms but as it reads a register that is updated every 5 ms on the board, it reads the same value multiple times.
    To get around this problem there are two methods:
    Buffered High-Speed-Capturing (HSC)
    With buffered HSC the board stores a position value in it's onboard buffer each time a trigger occurrs on the axis' trigger input. HSC allows a trigger rate of about 2 kHz. That means, you can store a position value every 500 µs. Please refer to the HSC examples. You may have to look into the buffered breakpoint examples to learn how to use a buffer, as there doesn't seem to be a buffered HSC example available. Please note that you need an external trigger-signal (e. g. from a counter of a DAQ board). Please note that the amount of position data that you can acquire in a single shot is limited to about 16.000 values.
    Buffered position measurement with additional plugin-board
    If you don't have a device that allows you to generate a repetitive trigger signal as required in method 1.), you will have to use an additional board, e. g. a PCI-6601. This board provides four counter/timers. You could either use this board to generate the trigger signal or you could use it to do the position capturing itself. A PCI-6601 (or an M-Series board) provides can run a buffered position acquisition with a rate of several hundred kHz and with virtually no limitation to the amount of data to be stored. You could even route the encoder signals from your 7350 to the PCI-6601 by using an internal RTSI cable (no external wiring required).
    I hope this helps,
    Jochen Klier
    National Instruments

  • About monitors and LCD displays

    I want give you some directrices about the display sub system.
    Like you all know there are CRT monitors and LCD displays.
    CRT
    CRT monitors are based upon electron beams hitting Electroluminescent phosphorus. In these monitors the most important parameters are:
    1) Dot pitch
    2) Refresh rate
    Dot pitch is the size of a single phosphorus point, smaller is better. Typical values range between 0.24 and 0.25. Beware with monitors having a not constant dot pitch, there are monitors with dot pitch of 0.24 at center of screen and 0.25 at the borders. I recommend monitors with constant dot pitch size across all screen.
    Refresh rate is the number of times a single electron beam travels across the screen drawing a single frame (from left to right and top to bottom) each second. It is measured in Herz (Hz). Bigger is better. Typical values range between 60 Hz and 120 Hz and the value depends upon resolution, more resolution goes to less possible refresh rate. If you are going to play games with shutter glasses, make sure your monitor is capable of 120 Hz minimun at the playing resolution. In 3D Stereo, each full 3D frame must be drawn 60 times/second (60 Hz) but a 3D frame is a single right eye frame and a single left eye frame, 60 Hz for left frame and 60 Hz for right frame are the full 120 Hz. If you CRT is not capable of these 120 Hz your eyes will suffer fatigue / strain and you would have a great headache after prolonged time periods.
    LCD
    A LCD display do not uses a electron beam to excite phosphorus and generate colored points, instead this it uses a grille and a special lamp. Instead drawing a frame line at line from top to bottom and left to right, it renders the frame in a step only and continuously, these displays are flat for this, there is no necesity for high voltage and magnetic fileds to move the electron beam. In these displays these are the more important parameters:
    1) Dot pitch
    2) Response time
    3) Number of colors (color space)
    Dot pitch is the same as with CRTs
    Reponse time is the time it gets going from pure white to pure black. Less is better. It is measured in miliseconds. Good typical values range about 16 ms. If you are going to use the LCD to play games, response time is the more important parameter at all.
    Number of colors are the simultaneus colors in screen. It have a inverse relationship with response time. It is measured in million of colors or bits. 24 bits of color depth are 16.7 million of colors. Typical values range agout 16 / 16.7 millions. Greater is better. LCDs with 16 ms response time have, usually, 16.5 millions of colors.
    Somethimes, the manufacturer will provide you drivers (setup or inf files) for your operating system. I recomend install this drivers. Don't panic if there are no drivers for your display device, Windows, probably, will find the suitable driver for your brand and model.
    If you have a CRT and you are stuck at 60~85 Hz you will need the right driver because Windows would not have found a suitable driver from its drivers base and it chose a standard monitor driver.
    If you have a LCD and you are stuck at 60 Hz, all is fine, as i have told you yet, LCD displays paint the screen continuously, you will not appreciate any flicker at 60 Hz in these devices. You can check this if you have a digital camera, make a photo of a CRT with a shutter of <monitor refresh rate> * 1.5. You will see a partially drawn picture. If you take a photo of a LCD with the same shutter rules you will get a full picture. With LCD you will get full pictures always, independently of the shutter.
    I hope al this info will be helpful to you.

    I have found a very interesting link on the Anandtech Web site about LCDs, it is a old one but i think it will be useful.
    The link is this

  • Info about Monitor Entries

    Hi,
    Can anyone give me the info about the different monitor classes.
    For example, if I use these values,
    MONITOR-MSGID = 'RSM'
    MONITOR-MSGTY = 'I'.
    MONITOR-MSGNO = '799'.
    MONITOR-MSGV1 = " Sample Text
    it displays "Error: Sample Text", while I want where it just displays "Sample Text" or "Info: Sample Text" etc.
    Is there any document that exaplains the different monitor classes and the results?
    Thanks a lot
    Gova

    Hi Gova,
    In the MIME repository (SE80) you can look at the different message classes and message numbers.
    Repository Information System > Other Objects > Meesage Classes > Type in RSM and F8.
    Hope this helps...

  • About "monitor.cc"

    Hi, everyone!
    I have a question about the file monitor.cc in OpenSAPRCT1.1.4.
    The file monitor.cc located in \OpenSPARCT1.1.4\verif\env\iss\pli\monitor\c.
    Has there anyone read and discussed it ?
    Is it been used in regression or not ?
    I have modified the file, but sims.log got no change at all .So i doubt whether this file has been compiled in regression.
    Thanks!

    monitor.cc is part of the PLI library.
    The PLI libraries are compiled separately from the
    RTL, using the mkplilib script. You probably did
    this once already after reading the DV manual and
    promptly forgot about it. :)
    The mkplilib script is completely separate from the
    sims script and there is no dependency detection, so
    unless you run mkplilib again (then run the sims
    regression), you'll always link with last compiled
    PLI library.
    This issue has bitten me more than once.
    - JaredThank u!

  • Question about monitors

    Im trying to find a good monitor to use at home for Graphic Design, Web Design and 3D animation.
    I have 2 x 20" Samsung displays that are only 1600x900 res.  I found a couple of brands that Im considering but would like feedback if anyone has used or owns these specific brands.
    1st is AOC... I2353PH and AOC e2752Vh... 1 is a 23" and the other is a 27".
    2nd is HANNS G... HZ281HPB... This one is a 28"
    All three are great prices, the AOC 23" is $189 the 27" is $289 as well as the HANNS 28" is also $289.
    Im just tryin to find something affordable big, and that will last me a while with good resolution as well.  I believe all 3 of these screens are IPS.
    Any help would be greatly appreciated.

    A search for "best large monitors" turn up a Hans G that you mentioned
    Best 27-Inch to 30-inch LCD Monitors
    Macpreformance guide has their favorites:
    http://macperformanceguide.com/RecommendedDisplays.html

  • ADC and The G3 Question about Monitors

    My G3 Blue and White PowerMac is running great running OS X but my clunky monitor is starting to take up alot of desk space. I would like to add a 15" ADC Monitor to it (just to keep my apple apple). I currently know that I need the DVI to ADC adapter with the power brick to support the monitors power needs, and that my VGA graphics card cannot support this at all. Leaving the question what is the best card for the job? Do I need a vintage sort of card or is there a newer card that will support it (computer and monitor). Thanks for your help. Oh and I'm going to upgrade to Tiger soon in the future if that helps. Thanks anything is appreciated.

    Sorry Wrong place to post

  • Some problems about monitor in LMS4.1!!!Crying!!

                      Dear all,
                                   I add a new 4510 in my lms 4.1,but i can't collect  the information about cpu.
                                   And when I Greate a new thresholds ,there isn't the intface which i want to.
    Help me,please
    Thanks

    1. You can set messagememory to E, clear privacy data inside the browser and install all apps on your memorycard (note that some apps from nokia an only be installed on C). I' dont think it's possible to make the phonememory bigger, but Nokia could get rid of some bloatware and leave more free space on phonememory. But, try my tips, and you might get som megs back.
    2. We all hope that's possible.
    There are just a slight chance that some nokia employee would read this. Firstly,this is a user to user forum. But maybe we are lucky, and somebody looks into it.

  • Hi. about monitor message of integration engine from RWB.

    I  want to monitor message of iintegration engine from RWB.
    but i can not open message content tab page and queue monitor tab page.
    hint is : SSO login failed. need to  logon again.
    which user should i use to logon?
    i tried so many user not to be able to logon successuflly.

    Hi Joy,
       if you want to use the SSO functionality for any component you need to maintain it first....i think u SSO configurtion is not yet done ....and hence you are getting the above error.......
    Pls chk the below link....thsi is for PI 7.1...
    http://help.sap.com/saphelp_nwpi71/helpdata/EN/32/1c1041a0f6f16fe10000000a1550b0/content.htm
    Hope this will help..
    Regds,
    Pinangshuk.

  • Simple question (?) about monitor size

    I'm trying to work out what monitor I would need to view 1 or 2 A4 documents at 100% viewed in vertical/portrait.
    Will Apples 23" be sufficient, or would the 30" be neccesary?

    That's right. A few applications let you enter the actual dpi of the screen so that 100% shows 100%. But not many apps do, so one inch on the screen ruler rarely matches up with one inch on paper. Apple's Scalable User Interface technology may in the future allow us to calibrate the screen to take the actual display dpi into account at the system level. Maybe in Leopard.

  • A question about monitor settings and printing?

    I have a new PC with an HD monitor, it didn't come with an HDMI cable, but a VGA one, I recently got the HDMI and I noticed that comparatively when using the VGA cable & using the default monitor settings that the darks were darker than when using the HDMI with default settings, (the colour depth looked best with the VGA) I'm using PE9 and need to make an image to have printed at the printers, I would love to use the HDMI cable, but I'm concerned that if I do (and I change the monitors default settings for contrast, hue...etc to compensate) that... it will have been edited here one way and look totally different on the print shops monitor...
    ... So, how can I be sure it will come back from the printers looking the same as I had edited it?
    Should I give up with the HDMI cable? I also have PrE 9 for video editing, so I'm a bit confused at to what is best to do...
    Thanks.

    There are no free calibration tools.  Like most things you get what you pay for.  However, the low end versions are quite good, so take a look at the Xrite Huey.
    This will get your display calibrated which ensures you see the best rendering of the image on screen.  It does not guarantee good print matching since this also requires a print colour managed process and good viewing conditions.
    Colour settings in Elements are mis-leading.  They apply to new documents being created in Elements or to images being opened that don't contain a colour profile.  Virtually all JPEG images from cameras will have a profile tagged in them.  So choose any setting but not the one that says 'No Colour Management'.  The best default in my opinion is 'Optimise for Screen'
    Colin

  • Question about monitor calibration

    I'm hoping someone can tell me what role the monitor factory settings play on monitor calibration.  My Spyder 3 Elite calibration device tells me (before I start calibration) that I should reset the factory settings on my monitor.  On my old monitor I didn't know what the factory settings were and couldn't find a way to reset them.  My new monitor just arrived today with a brightness setting of over 90 (on a scale from 0-100, and the contrast setting was around 80.  The first thing I did when I turned the monitor on was to change that because the display was so bright I could hardly read the forum on it.  I can't imagine that those are the "factory settings" that I am supposed to use!  Thanks!

    This is actually a VERY good question, because the initial settings will affect, to some extent, how you'll see all things that are not color-managed.
    Things get even more complicated if you're going to maintain two monitors and would like them to more or less match.
    What I'd do is spend some time, before firing up the profiling device, to try to set the on-monitor settings so that you have a comfortable brightness level and get the response as close as possible to gamma 2.2.  Then the video card curve cablibration process won't have as much to change.
    There's a chart I like to use to see if the gamma is close to 2.2:
    First, make sure any remnants of a monitor profile from your old monitor are removed, and that you're back to defaults (e.g., sRGB IEC61966-2.1).
    Make sure and view the above chart at 100% full size, and using your on-monitor controls try to get the gray bars in the left column to seem as one smooth gradient, the same brightness from side to side.  Also, you should barely be able to see dark gray on black squares in the top-right black bar on white background.
    Depending on your monitor gamut, you may not be able to get all the color out of the center column, but get it as close as possible.  Then you'll leave the calibration/profiling process a good starting point, and you shouldn't be hugely disappointed in what you see from your non-color-managed applications.
    -Noel

  • Simple Question about 'Monitor Clients' on WCS

    Hello
    When I use WCS and go the 'Clients' tab on the Home page and then click 'Associated Clients' it shows me a whole list of usernames/MAC adresses/ip addresses/ etc.
    One of these column titles is 'Protocol'.
    On some of my entries there is an AP with a MAC of 00:00:00:00:00:00 (which I know is a cosmetic bug that is not resolved by Cisco) but its 'Protocol' state is show as 'Mobile' rather than 802.11b or 802.11g.
    Does anyone know why the 'Protocol' is classed as Mobile? What does it mean, if anything?
    thanks
    Bryn

    Hi I read your post. I see the "mobile" status of clients on my network when they are being forwarded from another wireless controller via a mobility group. I use this feature for our guest network. Do you have any of your WLC's in the same mobility group or any kind of guest network?

  • The pool managing the instance is not available or the location monitoring object cannot be found - discovery progress

    Hi,
    I have installed scom 2012 with integrated SP1 on windows server 2008 R2 with integrated SP1 and SQL 2008 R2 SP2.
    The Problem I have is when trying to discovery I´m getting this error:
    The pool managing the instance is not available or the location monitoring object cannot be found
    Date: 05.03.2013 14:44:22
    Application: Operations Manager
    Application Version: 7.0.9538.0
    Severity: Error
    Message:
    Microsoft.EnterpriseManagement.Common.LocationObjectNotFoundException: The pool managing the instance is not available or the location monitoring object cannot be found.
       at Microsoft.EnterpriseManagement.Common.Internal.ServiceProxy.HandleFault(String methodName, Message message)
       at Microsoft.EnterpriseManagement.Common.Internal.AdministrationServiceProxy.LaunchDiscovery(Guid batchId, IList`1 jobDefinitions)
       at Microsoft.EnterpriseManagement.Administration.ManagementServer.BeginExecuteWindowsDiscovery(IList`1 discoveryConfigurations, AsyncCallback callback, Object state)
       at Microsoft.EnterpriseManagement.Mom.Internal.UI.Administration.DiscoveryProgress.<>c__DisplayClass7.<SubmitTask>b__3(Object , ConsoleJobEventArgs )
       at Microsoft.EnterpriseManagement.Mom.Internal.UI.Console.ConsoleJobExceptionHandler.ExecuteJob(IComponent component, EventHandler`1 job, Object sender, ConsoleJobEventArgs args)
    How can I solve this? Thank you.
    gruss Daniel Ovadia MBSS - Microsoft Dynamics CRM MCNPS

    See the article I wrote/posted here about monitoring Domain Controllers: http://adinermie.wordpress.com/2014/02/26/scom-agent-grayed-out-when-trying-to-monitor-domain-controllers/. 
    And to add an account to Local Administrators role on a Domain Controller, follow this:
    Open a command promt using the "Run as administrator" function and then run the following command.
    net localgroup Administrators /add {domain}\{user}

  • Recommendation for external monitor

    I have a G4 12" 1.5 GHz PowerBook with 768 MB of RAM, currently running 10.4.7. I'd like to buy an inexpensive external monitor, and am currently looking at a Dell 19" flat panel (model number SP1908FP). I'm pretty ignorant about monitors; I've read some of the discussions on this board, and looked at the specs for my laptop, but I'd like a confirmation before I buy it. The Dell monitor specs say 1280x1028, and although I don't actually know what that means, I see that it matches the PowerBook specs. Do I need to know anything else? And what do I need in the way of connectors? Should I be looking at other brands?
    Total newbie about this stuff, so all help is much appreciated!
    Thanks.
    eMac, 12" PB G4 1.5 GHz   Mac OS X (10.4.7)  
    eMac, PB G4 12"   Mac OS X (10.4.5)  

    My recommendation would be to get a widescreen monitor, as I think it fits more with the Apple design.
    Your 12" PB came with a mini DVI to DVI adapter (you do remember where it is?). Using this adapter, you can hook it up to a monitor that supports a DVI input, which means you can display a digital signal - the computer doesn't have to convert it to analog first. I think the digital signal produces a crisper display.
    We use a 19" Samsung widescreen monitor (model 940BW) on our mac mini (not a PB, I know), and it provides a great, widescreen, digital picture. The Samsung came with the DVI cable, so we didn't have to buy one. Got it from Sam's, around $200.
    On an LCD screen, I think it's important to buy locally from someplace with a good return policy. Sometimes you can get a display with dead LCD pixels, and many vendors won't take them back unless there are a fair number not working (as I recall, one vendor says there have to be at least 8 pixels not working). If you buy from the internet, make sure you understand their return policy, and ask about dead pixels indicating a defective product (if you decide you don't want it, many companies will make you pay for return shipping. Defective mechandise most vendors will pay return shipping).

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