running watches cheap image
Q. Saturday me and the guy I like(he likes me too) are going somewhere. I don't know where.
He likes-
Skate/snow boarding.
Running.
Watching movies.
Eating.-_-
Goofing off.
I can't skateboard and the snow is gone.
What can we do(I'm 14) for very cheap.
He likes-
Skate/snow boarding.
Running.
Watching movies.
Eating.-_-
Goofing off.
I can't skateboard and the snow is gone.
What can we do(I'm 14) for very cheap.
Answer
Go to the park or some kid place like Funspot.. you'd be surprised how fun it is when you're a teenager.
Go to the park or some kid place like Funspot.. you'd be surprised how fun it is when you're a teenager.
How can I ran a projector and a external monitor at once?
Lukasz M
I need to run a projector and a monitor (outside of my lap-top screen) at the same time. My lap-top only has one connector in the back. Is there a cable i can purchase that will split the connection for both? Thank you.
Answer
A Y cable is a bad idea. The VGA cable has a terminating impedance requirement of 75 ohms. When you put two monitors on one cable that will mess up the impedance. At best both screens will be dim. I would suspect that you will get ghosting and ringing problems too.
There are buffer boxes that you can buy that receive the signal from the computer and then resend it on multiple outputs. These are more expensive than a Y cable, but they do the job properly.
This will produce the same image on both the external monitor and the projector.
If you want different images then you need another video adapter. This you can't do with the video chips in your laptop, but you can get a USB to video adapter. Because of the USB bandwidth limitations I would not want to watch a movie over one of these, but for a powerpoint presentation, etc. it should be fine.
A USB to video adapter may be cheaper than a buffer box, in which case you have to tell the system to mirror the images between the external video and the USB video.
A Y cable is a bad idea. The VGA cable has a terminating impedance requirement of 75 ohms. When you put two monitors on one cable that will mess up the impedance. At best both screens will be dim. I would suspect that you will get ghosting and ringing problems too.
There are buffer boxes that you can buy that receive the signal from the computer and then resend it on multiple outputs. These are more expensive than a Y cable, but they do the job properly.
This will produce the same image on both the external monitor and the projector.
If you want different images then you need another video adapter. This you can't do with the video chips in your laptop, but you can get a USB to video adapter. Because of the USB bandwidth limitations I would not want to watch a movie over one of these, but for a powerpoint presentation, etc. it should be fine.
A USB to video adapter may be cheaper than a buffer box, in which case you have to tell the system to mirror the images between the external video and the USB video.
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