Video splitter or multiple video cards
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;307873 This article indicates that WinXP supports up to 10 monitors. Many video cards will support 2 monitors. If you install two such cards, then you may connect 4 monitors. Add video cards as long as you have empty PCI slots in the PC.
If you have a video card which supports dual display then you can connect 2 monitors to your computer. If not then you can either buy one that supports it or you can also buy something called a KVM Switch which allows you to connect multiple monitors and switch between them.
If you want to work with two monitors you will need a monitor switch box or a second video card to connect two SVGA monitors to one computer. You'll need Windows XP or Mac OS X or newer.
Yes, it will work. You have to have a certain kind of video card which supports dual monitor option.
You can't a CPU is one computer. However, you can run may virtual computers on one real computer.
There are many advantages to having multiple monitors on a single system. With multiple monitors you can have one application open on one monitor, while you have information that needs to be input on another monitor. Having multiple monitors, can greatly increase work efficiency as there is less need to alt-tab between applications.
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Sure you can. You just need to connect to monitors to one video card and, assuming your video driver supports it, with it most likely does, it'll automatically configure the desktop to use both monitors.
you dont. you can hook them to the computer though.Another AnswerYou need two video cards in the backplane. Each video card can drive two monitors. The video cards cannot be in their "Ganged" mode (SLI or Crossfire). If they are, only one monitor will be driven (main port on primary video card). The other three will be blank.
No. It connects to the motherboard at one end, and a drive or device on the other.
in RAM model only one CPU is work in PRAM model multiple cpu is work
You can connect via the VGA, DVI or DFP connections. (which ever one is available in your computer.