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That is hard to answer without knowing more details about the actual computer. What is the resolution that your monitor is currently set at. Does the actual game support that resolution. It appears it is defianatley a resolution problem. Research the supported resolutions for the game that you are trying to play, then see if your video card has a matching resolution. If the monitor is a "wide-screen" then you may need to set the resolution to a standard montior size to play the game.
To do something blindly means to proceed without knowing where you are going. An example sentence would be: He walked blindly into the telephone pole.
yes it is possible
A CRT Monitor can support many output resolutions without losing quality of the image. But LCDs only support lower resolutions by interpolating the image, which makes it look "fuzzy".
the resolution is probably set to hi....when you turn on your computer hit f8 over and over until you see a screen with some options...select safe mode and then when windows loads left click on your mouse select properties then change your resolution lower..
it means to trust without thought..trust willingly
A "Native Resolution" on a monitor refers to the resolution it is meant to be run at, where the resolution usually matched to being pixel perfect <Meaning information displayed on the screen for the computer matches up to display's pixels perfectly. The computer will put out, for example, a 1280x1024 screen in which the contents of it's desktop or video stream will fit in, and the monitor is able to display this perfectly because that is what the Raster is set too. Now CRT monitors usually had a maximum resolution it would be able to display and could do smaller resolutions by switching phase without much, if any, loss in quality. This was one of the few advantages of a CRT over and LCD, which can display lower resolution but must resort to "Interpolation" in order to do so. Interpolation allows the LCD to display a resolution lower then it's native. Such as the monitor above with a 19 inch display and a native resolution of 1280x1024 (4:3 aspect ratio) would be able to show a computer screen at a res of 800x600, but it would look much worse then a LCD of native 800x600 resolution. So when a monitor says "Native Resolution: 1920x1080" it means that is the resolution your computer should be set too in order to get the best quality. Hope that helps!
Use a needler
You cannot I monitor another cell phone without targetting that cell phone to monitor the phone.
A "Native Resolution" on a monitor refers to the resolution it is meant to be run at, where the resolution usually matched to being pixel perfect <Meaning information displayed on the screen for the computer matches up to display's pixels perfectly. The computer will put out, for example, a 1280x1024 screen in which the contents of it's desktop or video stream will fit in, and the monitor is able to display this perfectly because that is what the Raster is set too. Now CRT monitors usually had a maximum resolution it would be able to display and could do smaller resolutions by switching phase without much, if any, loss in quality. This was one of the few advantages of a CRT over and LCD, which can display lower resolution but must resort to "Interpolation" in order to do so. Interpolation allows the LCD to display a resolution lower then it's native. Such as the monitor above with a 19 inch display and a native resolution of 1280x1024 (4:3 aspect ratio) would be able to show a computer screen at a res of 800x600, but it would look much worse then a LCD of native 800x600 resolution. So when a monitor says "Native Resolution: 1920x1080" it means that is the resolution your computer should be set too in order to get the best quality. Hope that helps!
Well, you can use a program called irotate if you have a monitor that supports a resolution of 1440x900 (in other words a 17" or 19" monitor) and choose to rotate it in irotate's settings or it is built in to your graphics driver as extra software such as an Intel 845GV/GL/GE chipset. Also it should be enabled on most recent NVIDIA Graphics Cards such as GeForce 8 series. For irotate: http://www.entechtaiwan.com/util/irotate.shtm
bush feared a tangled conflict without clear resolution