Setting Up Dual Monitors
- []V[]essenjah
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Setting Up Dual Monitors
Thinking about setting up dual monitors for my 3D work to make my workflow a bit faster. I hear that you have to either 1. Get a new video card with two ports or 2. a second video card.
What I'm wondering, is if this second video card would have to be a pci card? I'm guessing probably so but I figured I would ask.
If not, I could try to slip my old GF4 4200 into the pci slot and upgrade to a newer GeForce card. Otherwise, I'll probably just nab a GeForce 2 off from Ebay or Amazon.
It would be better just move my GF 4 down if I can because it doesn't have a fan, however it will work fine since my case is super-cooled and has a side fan that would blow directly on it anyway.
What I'm wondering, is if this second video card would have to be a pci card? I'm guessing probably so but I figured I would ask.
If not, I could try to slip my old GF4 4200 into the pci slot and upgrade to a newer GeForce card. Otherwise, I'll probably just nab a GeForce 2 off from Ebay or Amazon.
It would be better just move my GF 4 down if I can because it doesn't have a fan, however it will work fine since my case is super-cooled and has a side fan that would blow directly on it anyway.
- []V[]essenjah
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- Krom
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A dualview setup requires two monitors and two working video outputs, either one output each on two video cards or one video card with dual outputs. With a dual head video card you do NOT need another PCI video card.
Your old 4200 card is likely an AGP card and can not be placed in a PCI slot period. If you are going to upgrade your card having a second card is totally pointless unless you were going for triple displays since pratically every video card worth upgrading to that was made in the last 3 years will have dual monitor support.
Other then that, all you need is two monitors. Identical monitors are not required.
Your old 4200 card is likely an AGP card and can not be placed in a PCI slot period. If you are going to upgrade your card having a second card is totally pointless unless you were going for triple displays since pratically every video card worth upgrading to that was made in the last 3 years will have dual monitor support.
Other then that, all you need is two monitors. Identical monitors are not required.
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I would aim higher then the trash heap that all the low end FX series cards are.
Like a 6600 or 6600GT
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6814121197
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6814122206
Note all these cards have dual outputs by means of a VGA and a DVI port, most retail cards should come with a DVI ---> VGA converter.
Like a 6600 or 6600GT
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6814121197
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6814122206
Note all these cards have dual outputs by means of a VGA and a DVI port, most retail cards should come with a DVI ---> VGA converter.
- Mobius
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Recommend you do NOT use a two card solution. Even today it is buggy at best, and difficult to get reliable results with. I've used dualhead since early 1999 BTW!
If you go with nVidia, you won't need additional drivers - but an ATI card is best served with "Ultramon" - a very nice dual screen app.
Recommend that whatever size monitor you have as your main device, then you use an identical screen for the other, as well. Mismatched monitor sizes can be a pain.
If you go with nVidia, you won't need additional drivers - but an ATI card is best served with "Ultramon" - a very nice dual screen app.
Recommend that whatever size monitor you have as your main device, then you use an identical screen for the other, as well. Mismatched monitor sizes can be a pain.
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I'm gonna go ahead and disagree with everything Mobi just said. (aside from the ultramon bit, that parts true)
I used a 2 card solution for quite a while, in the form of an AGP Ti4200 and a PCI TNT2, and never had any issues with drivers or stability. For one thing, both cards used the same drivers which helped tremendously as far as getting the thing up and running. Some careful shopping here will eliminate headaches later.
I'm running a 19" LCD and a 17" CRT at different resolutions and not having a problem... care to elaborate on the pain here? There is a somewhat annoying dead spot at the bottom right of the primary monitor, where the cursor hangs up if I try to go from the bigger screen to the smaller one, but I've learned to avoid that area when moving between monitors.
x2 to what Krom said, avoid the 5500 at all costs. In most apps you'd likely be taking a performance hit vs. the Ti4200.
I used a 2 card solution for quite a while, in the form of an AGP Ti4200 and a PCI TNT2, and never had any issues with drivers or stability. For one thing, both cards used the same drivers which helped tremendously as far as getting the thing up and running. Some careful shopping here will eliminate headaches later.
I'm running a 19" LCD and a 17" CRT at different resolutions and not having a problem... care to elaborate on the pain here? There is a somewhat annoying dead spot at the bottom right of the primary monitor, where the cursor hangs up if I try to go from the bigger screen to the smaller one, but I've learned to avoid that area when moving between monitors.
x2 to what Krom said, avoid the 5500 at all costs. In most apps you'd likely be taking a performance hit vs. the Ti4200.
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Vindicator, that dead spot issue is because monitor 2 is running a different resolution then monitor 1, I used to have that issue and it never bothered me that much, but now I have two identical monitors so there are no dead screen areas.
On Mobius's two card issue, Nvidia cards do not have that problem, as long as the forceware or detonator driver set you are using still has support for both cards there will be no issues mixing any PCIe or AGP card with another PCI card or as many PCI cards as you can fit in your system. Using all nvidia dual head cards it would be easy to drive 10 monitors from one system if you were crazy rich enough.
Heheh pun, I don't have to side scroll to read this thread. 1280x960++ 2560x960+++
On Mobius's two card issue, Nvidia cards do not have that problem, as long as the forceware or detonator driver set you are using still has support for both cards there will be no issues mixing any PCIe or AGP card with another PCI card or as many PCI cards as you can fit in your system. Using all nvidia dual head cards it would be easy to drive 10 monitors from one system if you were crazy rich enough.
Heheh pun, I don't have to side scroll to read this thread. 1280x960++ 2560x960+++
- []V[]essenjah
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I know. If I wanted to, I could just go into display properties and play around with monitor placement. Or, shock horror, switch to 1280x1024 on my CRT (and deal with the associated eyestrain from looking at it at 60hz).Krom wrote:Vindicator, that dead spot issue is because monitor 2 is running a different resolution then monitor 1, I used to have that issue and it never bothered me that much, but now I have two identical monitors so there are no dead screen areas.
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Aye, thats why I got two CRTs that are identical, 1280x960 @ 100 Hz, is easy on the eyes and just about the perfect resolution for a 19" monitor.Vindicator wrote:I know. If I wanted to, I could just go into display properties and play around with monitor placement. Or, shock horror, switch to 1280x1024 on my CRT (and deal with the associated eyestrain from looking at it at 60hz).Krom wrote:Vindicator, that dead spot issue is because monitor 2 is running a different resolution then monitor 1, I used to have that issue and it never bothered me that much, but now I have two identical monitors so there are no dead screen areas.
Dual display
If you are using AGP or PCIe, you need a vid card that has 2 outputs (usually VGA and DVI--you'll need a converter to go from DVI to VGA if you're using a CRT); however, if you have a second AGP or PCIe slot, stick a second card in thered--identical model--and connect the second monitor to do that, and configure windoze to do what is needed. Or, you can use the second output on the single card. For dual card, it has to be either BOTH AGP or BOTH PCI, but with linux you might be able to couple an AGP card with a nold PCI Cirrus Logic, for example.[]V[]essenjah wrote:Thinking about setting up dual monitors for my 3D work to make my workflow a bit faster. I hear that you have to either 1. Get a new video card with two ports or 2. a second video card.
What I'm wondering, is if this second video card would have to be a pci card? I'm guessing probably so but I figured I would ask.
If not, I could try to slip my old GF4 4200 into the pci slot and upgrade to a newer GeForce card. Otherwise, I'll probably just nab a GeForce 2 off from Ebay or Amazon.
It would be better just move my GF 4 down if I can because it doesn't have a fan, however it will work fine since my case is super-cooled and has a side fan that would blow directly on it anyway.
You will need identical models, buses (AGP/PCIe), and brands, of course. I'm not familiar with doing dual head (dual display) w/ two video cards, so I'm lost there.
- Krom
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Wrong, no motherboard in existance has two AGP slots and you can mix PCI, AGP and PCIe cards in any system without problems. Nvidia cards make it easy because of the unified driver architecture.
There is a chipset out there that supports PCIe, AGP, and PCI, you could have all three types of cards in one system and it would still work in windows. Making it work in linux in this case might be considerably harder depending on the maturity of the linux drivers.
There is a chipset out there that supports PCIe, AGP, and PCI, you could have all three types of cards in one system and it would still work in windows. Making it work in linux in this case might be considerably harder depending on the maturity of the linux drivers.
- []V[]essenjah
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Hmmmm would a GeForce 4 Ti4200 and a Geforce 2 PCI card work well together? What I would like to do is take Maya and divide my veiwports across both screens but I hear that can be graphically tough on a 2 port 6800. But I figure a GeForce 2 should be able to handle a good deal of the workload for the 4200 shouldn't it?
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Re:
The Geforce 2 is nowhere near "slightly lower" than a GF4 Ti. You'd have to shell out for a much newer PCI card to get performance equal to the 4200, and since you cant use the 4200 as your secondary you're stuck with either shelling out for a new 6800 (or similar) card, or dealing with the slowness of your secondary.[]V[]essenjah wrote:LOL, I'm running Maya PLE on a single 4200 right at the moment and it works just fine. My point is, if it the second monitor would run fine on a second 4200 or slightly lower? Wouldn't it just draw from the second card?
One alternative card you could look at is a PCI GF4 MX. Note that the MX cards are based on the GF2 and thus are slower than your 4200, but they are indeed faster than a GF2 and should be easy to find for cheap. I'd look for one of those if you dont want to shell out for a new 6800. If a 4200 runs Maya fine, then the MX should be okay at it, if a bit choppy.
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Not to mention that running a 6800 on a sub 2GHz system would severely bottleneck the card.
"One spelling mistake can destroy your life. A Husband sent this to his wife : "I'm having a wonderful time. Wish you were her." - @RobinWilliams
I have two identical 21\" monitors and a 7800 GT gfx card that has two monitor inputs. I'm just wondering what the benefit is to having two monitors set up....Is it worth it? (two 21\" monitors is a huge use of desk space) And what would be the best use of 2 monitors on the same pc?
sorry to hijack the thread, but was about to start my own when I saw this one...
RM
sorry to hijack the thread, but was about to start my own when I saw this one...
RM
Fighting villains is what I do!
- Vindicator
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In my case, I use the second monitor for Winamp, Motherboard Monitor (ala Coolmon) and Trillian, plus other apps if I need em (like homework assignments that I'm workin on on the main monitor, or if I'm doing something in Photoshop I might put a reference pic that I need on the second monitor). Basically all the program switching that you never realize you do so much is eliminated or greatly reduced.
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Ready, you have to try a dualview before you really know what it's like. I use two identical 19\" monitors, on the main monitor I pretty much always have a firefox window open full screen, monitor 2 has winamp, trillian, and a windows explorer window open most of the time, plus an ultramon taskbar. If I get seriously working on some project, like moving a lot of files around between drives, I'll use two full screen explorer windows. Or have one web browser working on a new post on monitor 1, while I research some stuff for the post in another web browser full screen on monitor 2.
Once you start using dual monitors and get used to having that much desktop space it's really hard to go back to just one. It is nothing like running one high resolution monitor, two monitors at 1024x768 would feel like more useable desktop space then one monitor at 2048x1536. (I run 1280x960 on both screens for 2560x960). If you want to try it out, get a trial copy of ultramon (you can use it for 30 days free), then plug in your second monitor and use dualview in the nvidia driver control panel. You have to boot up the computer with both monitors connected and on to get the dualview option in the nvidia control panel, otherwise only span and clone options are available.
Once you start using dual monitors and get used to having that much desktop space it's really hard to go back to just one. It is nothing like running one high resolution monitor, two monitors at 1024x768 would feel like more useable desktop space then one monitor at 2048x1536. (I run 1280x960 on both screens for 2560x960). If you want to try it out, get a trial copy of ultramon (you can use it for 30 days free), then plug in your second monitor and use dualview in the nvidia driver control panel. You have to boot up the computer with both monitors connected and on to get the dualview option in the nvidia control panel, otherwise only span and clone options are available.
Once you go dual you will never go back =)
I have the same setup as krom, 2x 19\"
Another great thing is dual wallpapers
I have the same setup as krom, 2x 19\"
Another great thing is dual wallpapers
(22:58) [X]LunchBoxInVirginia: I see myself standing on top of a pyramid standing in 'Sun God' like robes with thousands of naked women screaming my name. throwing little pickles at me
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And think, I'm serously planning on going for a triple display when I have the disposable cash to get a few LCDs. Two is not enough.fyrephlie wrote:hard to go back to just one? it's nearly impossible, you start getting pissed off by the lack of space, and you try to drag things off to a monitor that isn't there!!
no, I can't ever go back to single display. EVER!
Re:
lol... ditto. i've been contemplating going triple or even *gasp* QUAD!!! but that would involve going lcd on this machine... i could feasibly fit four CRTS on this desk... but the 2 i have is already taking a lot of space. i have some friends that do run an 'a/v' company i can get some good deals on high-end lcd monitors, so i am really debating over it...Krom wrote:And think, I'm serously planning on going for a triple display when I have the disposable cash to get a few LCDs. Two is not enough.fyrephlie wrote:hard to go back to just one? it's nearly impossible, you start getting pissed off by the lack of space, and you try to drag things off to a monitor that isn't there!!
no, I can't ever go back to single display. EVER!
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Most games take over the console and don't allow you to do anything on monitor 2. If you have an IM program or something open on monitor 2 you can still see what is going on, the windows will update but you have to alt-tab out of the game to interact with them just like you normally would for a single display. Dualview basically does nothing for games.
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I always wondered what the advantage would be until I started getting into some serious graphic programs such as Photoshop CS2, Maya, and Blender. Particularly Maya and Blender.
For instance, with Maya, I could put my Hypergraph and/or orthograph on one side or I could put up a quad view and work with a single view in the main window so that I could view my mesh from all sides as I work. Or I could put one in a shaded view and the other in a wireframe. The possibilities are endless.
For instance, with Maya, I could put my Hypergraph and/or orthograph on one side or I could put up a quad view and work with a single view in the main window so that I could view my mesh from all sides as I work. Or I could put one in a shaded view and the other in a wireframe. The possibilities are endless.
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You don't need ultramon to make a dualview work at all. They work flawlessly without it, but having an ultramon taskbar on the second monitor enhances a dualview tremendously.
Just take a look at my desktop while I am using it:
http://krom.sploitz.com/temp/desktopuse.jpg
See the taskbar on the right, that's the ultramon taskbar, without it all the tasks would show up on the normal taskbar on monitor 1. If you move a window from one monitor to the next, it will also move from one taskbar to the next. So only windows open on monitor 1 show up on the monitor 1 taskbar, and only windows open on monitor 2 show up on the monitor 2 taskbar.
That is all that I use ultramon for though, just the taskbar, the nvidia drivers do everything else. I use the nview desktop manager to enable three virtual desktops, it also allows me to drag full screen windows from one monitor to the other, and I also use it to set different backgrounds per display (windows normally shows the same background on both monitors). Ultramon can also set up different backgrounds per monitor, however with nview I can set different backgrounds per virtual desktop. Whenever I play a game to avoid having monitor 2 glare bother me I switch to an alternate desktop that has an all black background.
Just take a look at my desktop while I am using it:
http://krom.sploitz.com/temp/desktopuse.jpg
See the taskbar on the right, that's the ultramon taskbar, without it all the tasks would show up on the normal taskbar on monitor 1. If you move a window from one monitor to the next, it will also move from one taskbar to the next. So only windows open on monitor 1 show up on the monitor 1 taskbar, and only windows open on monitor 2 show up on the monitor 2 taskbar.
That is all that I use ultramon for though, just the taskbar, the nvidia drivers do everything else. I use the nview desktop manager to enable three virtual desktops, it also allows me to drag full screen windows from one monitor to the other, and I also use it to set different backgrounds per display (windows normally shows the same background on both monitors). Ultramon can also set up different backgrounds per monitor, however with nview I can set different backgrounds per virtual desktop. Whenever I play a game to avoid having monitor 2 glare bother me I switch to an alternate desktop that has an all black background.