DVI is the digital display standard for computer displays, so it is indeed a monitor cable.
DVI provides similar resolutions to analog VGA cables when running LCD panels at their native resolution and normally avoid timing errors that can reduce the clarity of VGA signals in some cases.
DVI can also support analog VGA signals on the same cable so before changing to a DVI cable make sure your monitor and computer both support DVI digital.
No it is to be connected to a TV, not a computer monitor
Use a DVI cable. It's digital, so you won't get any outside interference and will enjoy a better picture.
An HDMI to DVI cable might be your best solution.
There are many good computer monitor cable brands. Examples of good computer monitor cable brands includes the brands VGA, Mediabridge, DVI, and AmazonBasics.
Dual-link means that you can have a higher resulotion then with a single-link cable, but you can still use a single-link DVI cable in a dual-link DVI output.What you'll need is a single-link DVI-D or a single-link DVI-I cable!
A DVI, or Digital Visual Interface, cable delivers a clearer image to a LCD display, whether it is something like a monitor or a television. Since a DVI cable does not have to convert as much information as a VGA cable does, you do not lose anything anything in the signal and it comes out better.
Video cables: HDMI, DVI-D, VGA. Power cable.
When you use a VGA cable coming out of the monitor, the monitor is giving out an analog signal through the VGA connection. For the monitor to give out a digital signal, you need a DVI or HDMI cable. The VGA to HDMI cord just converts the analog signal into a digital signal so it's not completely useless, however the quality will not be as good as an HDMI to HDMI or DVI to DVI or HDMI to DVI
This monitor does support DVI outputs.
No. The DVI port on your computer is output only. However, you may be able to find a USB TV tuner card with DVI input that would allow you to pull this off.
It means it is not getting a signal from the computer. There are many situations that can cause this symptom, from the cable being unplugged to a motherboard failure to the computer simply not being turned on.
Use the DVI port. You can use a dvi cable, vga cable (using the dvi adapter that came with your computer), or a DVI to HDMI cable. Just plug the cable into the computer and the tv and your Mac will do the rest.