Yes and no. A monitor can support several different screen resolutions. A CRT monitor can technically support any screen resolution sent to it, although the screen may be unreadable at extremely high resolutions. An LCD monitor supports a strict number of resolutions, but almost always more than one. The resolution that your screen actually uses (or tries to use) is specified by the video card, not the monitor. So purchasing a high-definition monitor won't do you any good if your video card is only capable of displaying 1024x768.
Basically, the graphics card controls the pixels (colour and resolution) which allows coloured images - characters and graphics - to appear on the computer's monitor.
How I do it: See what kind of graphics card you have, in my case, ATI. Install these drivers for the Grahpics Card, then go through the setup and it should allow you to select your resolution.
You need a graphics card to see the monitor.
A graphics card that fits into an internal slot on the motherboard. A basic graphics card is usually in a standard computer. A gaming computer will have a much more powerful graphics card, even one cooled by its own fan.
You can't see the monitor if you don't have a graphics card.
All the computers pass signals to the monitors through a graphics card. And its your graphics card that controls the signals to the monitor. A graphics card may be integrated or installed in a VGA, PCI or ISA slot of the main board of your computer.
You need to get a Graphic card with dual l graphics ports if you want to run different resolutions , this is for different images on each monitor.
printer
To match a video card with a monitor, consider the monitor's resolution and refresh rate. Ensure the video card can support the monitor's maximum resolution (e.g., 1080p, 1440p, or 4K) and refresh rate (e.g., 60Hz, 144Hz) for optimal performance. Additionally, check for compatibility with the monitor's connection types (like HDMI or DisplayPort) and ensure the video card has sufficient VRAM for your intended applications, such as gaming or graphic design. Finally, consider the workload and performance requirements, as a more powerful video card may be needed for high-resolution gaming or professional graphics work.
In order for you to use the monitor to its full potential, you need a graphics card that supports the resolution of your monitor, and you need to install the drivers for that card. An "AGP 32 MB" card would be pretty old; a card that old may not support very high resolutions, and if they do, only at a lower color depth.
SVGA
That would be a video or graphics adaptor or simply, card.