If you launch a programme not compatible with your display settings, they may automatically changed
To change the screen resolution Windows 7 and older, right click on the desktop and select display to open the display properties. In here you will find the screen resolution settings. In Windows 8 and 8.1, right click on the traditional desktop and select screen resolution and follow the prompts.
Have you tried going into display settings and using the higher numbered display settings? Or if you have Vista it will let you make your display smaller or larger if you right click on your desktop, no matter which version of Windows you have, and choose "Display" or "Personalize" you should be able to change the size of what's shown on your screen.
a) Start > Control Panel > Display b) right click on desktop, click on 'Properties' can change background picture, screen saver, screen resolution, etc
The Display settings are set from the Displays section of System Preferences with Mac OS X.
go into control panel, click on Display, Click on Settings, Settings is where you make the initial change, you can also click on Advanced within settings, to get a further explanation
To edit your screen resolution and display parameters you will need to first open your start button and navigate to the "Control Panel". Once there select on "Appearance and Personalization" and navigate to "Display". From there you can change your Windows PC display settings.
menu settings display settings or menu settings phone settings display settings or the phone may not have a variety of dif. displays you may be stuck wit what you got if that's the case then im sorry but hop i helped some what
An individual can change documents and settings in Windows 8 with a few steps. First they can do it by hitting the charms bar. Then the button to press would be settings. Finally, they need to hit change PC settings.
It depends why it's changing. Windows default settings dims the display if you run a laptop off just the internal battery (to conserve power). You can change the settings, but you'll shorten your battery's working time between charges.
Nice and simple fix straight from the apple website..... here it is::-This symptom is usually caused by having the display set to something other than "millions of colors" (32-bit color). Use the steps below to correct the issue. Windows XP # Choose Start > Control Panel. # Click Display. # Click the Settings tab # Under Color quality, change the settings from 16(bit) to 32(bit) then click "Apply." Windows Vista # Click the WIndows icon. # Open the Control Panel. # Click Personalization. # Click Display Settings. # Under Colors, change the settings from 16(bit) to 32(bit) then click "Apply."On any other sytem, if you know how to change it to 32 bit colour do so. Note: Some applications may change the display bit depth to 16-bit color automatically. If the issue returns, check that the system color depth is set correctly and monitor the issue to see if the symptom occurs after running a particular application.
Right-click on your desktop, and select Display Settings
Right-click on your desktop, and select Display Settings