ensure your video cable is securely fastened, otherwise it may be your video cable is damaged or your video card or port is damaged or malfunctioning. your bios settings may also be set incorrectly to use a different video device other than what you are using
Could be bad LCD screen, defective video cable or bad motherboard. First, test the laptop with external monitor. If video on the external monitor is normal but it's bad on the laptop LCD, the problem is somewhere inside the laptop display panel (bad LCD, bad video cable, bad connection between cable/motherboard/LCD). If video on the external monitor is bad too, you have either software related problem or something is wrong with the motherboard. Try reinstalling Windows first, it might help.
monitor is the medium which help for directly communicate with the user and the computer .By the monitor no more efforts are too be needed.
Is it the monitor, the video card or a setting? If you have access to another monitor, plug it in and see if it too is upside down. If that's it, the yolk is installed wrong on the monitor CRT.
Yes, but if it is not too late, don't get an eMachine computer. I had one where the hard drive burnt out and then the motherboard and power supply burnt out too.
A computer will not operate efficiently and effectively if the central processor unit and the motherboard get too hot. Therefore a core temperature program can monitor the temperature of these and other parts and warn the user when they are getting dangerously warm.
Anything the laptop can send data too that is presented to the end-user is technically an output device. The built-in display, a monitor you connect through one of the data ports, a printer, etc. So yes, a monitor is an output device for a laptop
Check out how many display ports are on the back of it. The number of display ports should be how many monitors you can connect it too. It won't run games if it does have multi-monitor support, but normal usage should be fine.
Your monitor could be old and needs adjustment, or your video card could be crap. I've seen the same monitor look sharp on one PC and fuzzy on the next PC. You could be running through too much cable or a switchbox (KVM) and loosing the higher frequencies in your signal.
From the Help file on my computer: To change the refresh frequency for your monitor # Open Display in Control Panel. # On the Settings tab, click Advanced. # On the Monitor tab, in the Refresh Frequency list, click a new refresh rate. Notes * To open Display, click Start, click Control Panel, click Appearance and Themes, and then click Display. * The default refresh frequency setting is 100 Hertz, although your monitor may support a higher setting. Check your manufacturer's documentation for information regarding the settings your monitor supports. * A higher refresh frequency reduces any flicker on your screen, but choosing a setting that is too high for your monitor can make your display unusable and cause damage to your hardware. * Changes to the refresh frequency affect all users that log on to the computer.
To change the refresh frequency for your monitor # Open Display in Control Panel. # On the Settings tab, click Advanced. # On the Monitor tab, in the Refresh Frequency list, click a new refresh rate. Notes * To open Display, click Start, click Control Panel, click Appearance and Themes, and then click Display. * The default refresh frequency setting is 100 Hertz, although your monitor may support a higher setting. Check your manufacturer's documentation for information regarding the settings your monitor supports. * A higher refresh frequency reduces any flicker on your screen, but choosing a setting that is too high for your monitor can make your display unusable and cause damage to your hardware. * Changes to the refresh frequency affect all users that log on to the computer.
LCD monitors are designed to run at a native resolution. They have fixed dots that should line up with a pixel on your display. If your monitor is not set to its native resolution, it will try to display it, but the end image will be blurry and possibly distorted. You should change your computer's DPI (Dots Per Inch) setting instead of resolution if you find things too small to view on an LCD monitor.
No, that motherboard is an ATX form factor motherboard and thus incompatible (not to mention too large) to install on that system.