hello there, I have viewsonic monitor 17 inch model e70-7 a good monitor for me bought it 7years ago with no problems at all, but lately I got the screen with yellow tint and I played wih the data cable up and down and sideways until the yellow tint disappered, what encourged me to do so is that behind the yelloww tint the icons looks normal and only the blue color was slightly darkened, so I thought it is not a big problem in my monitor since I can surf and read playing games as well without any issue, the yellow tints as if floating on the glass of the screen I THINK they call shielding, now it is ok perfect so far, I hope contributed positively. thanks and have a nice day.
If you are using a vga connection, usually blue then you may have bent a pin on the connector, the cable may be bad, the monitor could be bad, your video card could be bad, or you could have the wrong driver or settings.
Yes, - Change the data cable of monitor - Changing the gamma to all red will allow you to see at least some green
This would generally be caused by a broken wire within the video cable. Green is not the only variation of this problem. Replacing the cable will most likely fix the issue.
you need to have a computer with the red green and white plug-in's and that should be it
This happened to me too. I replaced my monitor cable and that fixed the problem. I think it has something to do with the fact that VGA carries three colors: red, green and blue. One of the connections within the cable must have gone bad.
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.
I will explain how a monochrome (black-and-white) display works. A color display has the same basic mechanism, but with each pixel replaced by a triple of independent elements that produce varying amounts of red, green, and blue.
Yes you sertainly can, bit I hope you mean your monitor (screen). Your computer cannot be a laptop and you must have a tv with a headphone output, and your monitor can have either an audio input that should look like a green circle and you should be able to fit head phones in, or two imputs (one red and one white, also the size of headphones). If it has the green circle, then either your computer or monitor should have come with a wire that is green on both ends and both ends fit in a headphone jack (both sides look exactly the same and either side will work on either the TV or the monitor). Connect the PS2 to your TV like usual and then connect the green cable into the headphone jack in your TV and the other end in your monitor's audio input (green circle). Turn on everything and the transfer should work. If you use external speakers (separated ones) then connect the speakers into the TV's headphone jack (you will not need the green cable I talked about earlier). If you have the monitor with a red and white input, it's much more simple. You just connect the video part of the AV cable (usually the yellow part of the cable with three small cables) to your TV and the audios into your monitor (usually the red and white parts the the AV cable). That's the only two monitors I know so I hope I helped. Sent from my iPod touch.
A green light on your computer monitor i think means that it is on. im not sure though
If putting a known good monitor on your PC gives you a green screen, then something is broken. Probably your video card.
Trade the cord of the PC video port, move the video card to a new slot, and trade the video card.I hope it will be the right answer!ty denatra it was bery helpful and im going to give some hints too hope this helpsi believe you should ask yourself these questions:1. is the monitor electrical caple plugged in?2. is the monitor turned on? try pushing the power button on the front of the monitor it should turn yelow or green, indicating the monitor has power.3.is the monitor cable plugged into the video port at the back of the PC and the connector on the rear of the monitor?4.try a different monitor and a different monitor cable that you know are working5. turn the monitor 180 degrees.UndeadSoulz
White uses the most energy to display. This is because most monitors use the RGB pixel (Red Green Blue). To display the color white, the monitor must turn on all three pixels, thus consuming the most energy.