You'll probably need to refer to the manual (of the LCD monitor) or maybe
you can get the specs from the manufacturer's web site.
Otherwise try the respective resolutions supported by the monitor.
Regards,
Peter T
"Brett the Brat" wrote in message
...
Hmm. Tried to find out what the recommended res is, but can't see anything
in
the control panel. Any clues?
"Peter T" wrote:
Better type that again
Is your max res the same as the "recommended" res
Peter T
"Peter T" <peter_t@discussions wrote in message
...
But is your max res that the "recommended" res
Regards,
Peter T
"Brett the Brat" wrote in
message
...
Which is in complete contrast to my LCD which is set the max res, but
ClearType is still rubbish. As you say, can't win.
"Peter T" wrote:
You may also get some value out of
http://www.microsoft.com/typography/...ner/Step2.aspx
where you can customise the ClearType settings. Personally I think
ClearType
is a bunch of fuzzy crap (I have an LCD screen).
I also played around with that a while back and found ClearType to be
a
waste of time. The Office 2007 app's were awful on my LCD, worse than
other
apps for some reason. They have an additional Clear-type option which
if
anything makes things even worse (depends though on the particular
app -
Outlook dreadful). I found myself not using Excel 2007 unless I
absolutely
had to because it was giving me eye strain.
Eventually I found out it's best to set the resolution to that
recomended
for the monitor, did that and suddenly crystal clear. Unfortunately
though,
for me that meant a setting to max res which means now everything is
far
too
small to read. Can't win )-:
Regards,
Peter T