Well, that has happened to me, it is a problem that comes and goes, with no particular reason. Possible solutions: 1. Remove all speakers that are close to the monitor. 2. Change the position of the monitor to see if there are any electromagntical fields that could be interfering. 3. Verify the VGA cable, move it, shake it (it worked for me! lol). Change the cable if necessary. 4. Disconnect monitor from power source and VGA cable, reconnect and reboot PC. 5. Pray to the Lord. The screen shaking was SO annoying for me! Thank god the VGA cable shaking worked.
Make sure the connectors are fully plugged in if that doesnt work then it is probably time for a new monitor.
no it is not true
did you put a magnet on it? usually that is the cause no
There might be a problem with the cable between the computer and the monitor, or with the graphics card inside the computer. Check that the cable is plugged in between the computer and the monitor. cable,monitor and graphics card all work but I still can't get the monitor to work no signal could the processor cause this problem
Most probable cause is the video adapter. Can you try it on another computer to prove the monitor is good?
how is the first computer monitor
A computer monitor is hardware. It only provides for display.
Monitor is not plugged in or monitor is not plugged in to computer
1. Unstable electricity supply 2. Magnets around the monitor 3. Damaged Computer Graphics card or monitor it self
Check with external monitor - if problem persists - graphics card - connector cables - outdated drivers if external monitor works fine then- - all (any) mentioned above - lcd screen tips : give a shake, apply pressure on lcd, reseat connector cables, allow the computer to cool
Your tower is your computer. If you are asking if the monitor and computer have to match the answer is no. You can use any monitor with any computer.
It means that the monitor can't detect a signal from the computer. There are a number of things that might cause that: * If the monitor has more than one input, then the wrong one might be selected - nowadays, most monitors automatically switch to the "active" input, so this is less likely. * The monitor's signal cable might not be plugged in. * The computer is turned off. * The computer's video card is faulty. * The computer's video card is disabled. * The signal cable is faulty. * The monitor is faulty.