Set Up Multiple Monitors
Set Up Multiple Monitors
Photo by Juhan Sonin/Flickr/CC
Having two or three displays side-by-side doesn't just look cool, it can actually boost your productivity. Whether you're editing large images, working with video, managing a team or simply playing games, multiple monitors give you you more screen real estate to work on your projects. It's like having a larger digital desk.
With LCD display prices falling and most modern graphics cards supporting at least a dual-screen set-up, running several monitors isn't as expensive as it used to be. In fact, you can grab a graphics card and a new 19-inch monitor for less than that of a fancy smart phone. So why not double your desktop?
There are a few quirks to setting up multiple monitors that can trip you up. Here's our guide.
This article is part of a wiki anyone can edit. If you have advice to add about doubling down on screen space, log in and contribute.
Graphics cards
Start by checking out your current graphics card to see if your computer already has two video outputs.
This is a graphics card with two DVI outputs, which will let you run two monitors. Photo by Rob DiCaterino/Flickr/CC
If you don't have two (or more) video outputs, your first step will getting the appropriate number of outputs. There are a few different options when it comes to enabling multi-monitor setups. One is to get a graphics expansion module like the Matrox DualHead2Go. These can enable 2 or 3 monitors to be driven from a single VGA, DVI, or Displayport output. The next option is a USB to video out adapter. Newer USB adapters can output up to 1920 x 1200 (WUXGA) resolution, and it is possible to use multiple adapters simultaneously. The final option, available only to desktop users, is to upgrade your graphics card.
There are numerous graphics cards on the market, ranging from the simple $100 models that will work for most people, to high-end models aimed at gamers. Unless you're doing very graphics-intensive work (video editing or the like) the lower end will probably work just fine. Just make sure your new card has at least two monitor outs. Beware, some higher end cards have more outpus than they are capable of driving. For example, many AMD Radeon 5xxx series cards have four outputs but are only capable of driving three at a time.
If you have a laptop, the chances are good it has one or more video outputs. Some laptops will allow different combinations of up to three monitors (including the internal display). However, some laptops will only be able to mirror the internal display, or will force a second display to be a mirror.
Monitors
You could go out and splurge on some nice big, new monitors, but there's a good chance whatever you're using now will work just fine, which means you just need to add a second screen.
When it comes to buying a second monitor, try to stick with a model similar to what you have. While not totally necessary, similar models will generally be easier to set up and configure. They're also more aesthetically pleasing.
Also keep in mind that older graphics cards probably won't have support for newer connection types like HDMI. The most common connection type on these non-HDMI displays is DVI, and, fortunately, adapters for connecting HDMI to DVI are inexpensive and very common.
If you've got a new monitor but old graphics card, be sure to pick up the appropriate adapter when you buy that second monitor.
Set up your displays
Once you've got your graphics card installed and your second display arranged how you like it, it's time to set it up in your operating system's preferences.
Multiple monitors in Windows
Turn off your PC, plug in in the second monitor and restart Windows. With any luck, Windows will detect the new display and install the drivers for you.
At this point, your should have a mirror of your desktop on two screens. That's nice, but not what we're after here. Head to Control Panel, click on Display and select the "Multiple display" option. Adjust the resolution and orientation to suit your monitor setup.
Congratulations, you're now rocking dual monitors. You can drag windows between monitors and adjust your windows to suit your workflow.
Multiple monitors in Ubuntu Linux
Ubuntu's monitor setup screen lives in System > Preference > Display. Once that screen is up, click the "Detect monitors" button, which will force the system to find your new monitor. Select all the monitors listed and click the "On" radio button.
Be sure to uncheck the "mirror" option and then click "Apply".
While the process of setting up multiple monitors in Linux is easy, finding drivers that support your monitors isn't always easy. Before you head out to purchase a new graphics card, be sure to check with the Ubuntu forums and read up on success and failure stories.
Multiple monitors in Mac OS X
Not every Mac supports multiple monitors, so be sure to check the Apple support documents for your model before you purchase a second monitor.
Assuming your Mac does, all you need to do is plug it in, and Mac OS X should automatically recognize it. Head to System Preferences > Displays and you will see two screens pop up -- one on each monitor. From here, you can control your monitor settings, add backgrounds, decide where your menus and dock will show up, and so on.
Get stacked
A common set-up for laptop users is to prop up a second display screen on a tall stand, then plop your laptop directly beneath it. Instead of two screens sitting side by side, you'll have one on top of the other.
Get twisted
Most operating systems will let you adjust the orientation of your second monitor to run sideways -- in portrait mode, instead of the much-more-common landscape mode. Do this to your second monitor to view taller documents or to reduce the amount of scrolling needed to read long web pages.
Make the adjustments (if your OS allows it) in the display-settings dialogs described above.
Everything all at once
While we've focused on dual monitors for single operating systems, it is in fact possible to run multiple OSes on multiple monitors simultaneously. If you're interested, check out Synergy. Not only can Synergy share a single mouse, keyboard and multiple monitors across operating systems, it can even share clipboard data across all those PCs and operating systems.
Post pics of you rig
Got a crazy multi-monitor set up? Post it here to provide inspiration for others -- or just to show it off.
Here is my development rig, 1 Dell 24", two LG 22", 1 Samsung 19" and a small USB Samsung monitor. All running from a single Mac Pro Clone that I built.
Here's mine (1 23" Samsung with 2 19"Hyundais ) Plus 3 laptos and an ipad but those dont count because are sepparate computers
See more at howto.wired.com
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Time traveler caught on film. Hey, why not?
Time traveler caught on film: An Irish filmmaker has uncovered evidence of a woman speaking into a cellphone in a 1928 Charlie Chaplin film. And clearly there's no other possible explanation.
This screenshot from extra footage from the 1928 Charlie Chaplin film, "The Circus," shows a woman talking on what looks like a cellphone.
Youtube screenshot
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By
Eoin O'Carroll, CSMonitor.com /
October 28, 2010
An Irish filmmaker has uncovered irrefutable evidence of the viability of time travel: a shot of a woman jabbering into a cellphone in a Charlie Chaplin silent film.
George Clarke, the Belfast director of the independent zombie film, "Battle of the Bone," spotted the time traveler in the DVD extra footage of the 1928 Academy Award winning film, "The Circus." He uploaded the clip to YouTube on Oct. 19, and it has since been viewed 1.5 million times.
Actually, who knows? Now that we know that time travel exists, it could be that some of those 1.5 million views could have happened before the clip was uploaded.
In any case, the time traveler has enormous feet, probably a side-effect of warping through the fourth dimension. See for yourself:
We can't say exactly what era this time traveler comes from. The first cell phone was demonstrated by Motorola in 1973, although it wasn't until the late 1990s that cellphones became small enough to conceal in the hand. We're not sure what kind of phone she's holding, although we can rule out the iPhone because her call doesn't appear to have been dropped during the six seconds in which she is being filmed.
So let's say that she hails from between 1995 and 2025 (after which point we can assume that all mobile devices will be implanted directly into our heads).
Some skeptics have pointed out that, even if she traveled back in time with her phone, she couldn't have been talking into it because there were no cellular towers back then. Others have pointed out that it could be a vacuum-tube hearing aid, which was first sold in 1921.
But we prefer to subscribe to a principle that we call Occam's Quattro Titanium Razor, which states that the best explanation of a phenomenon should invoke extraneous elements that sound really cool.
And in any case, she's not the first time traveler to be captured on film. Here's some hipster in sunglasses caught in a photo from 1940.
Read more at www.csmonitor.com
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Read more at www.youtube.com