On Mon, Jun 17, 2002 at 10:42:54PM -0400, Brian J.Conway wrote: bconway> Most LCDs are generally meant to be run at a single resolution and will bconway> look fuzzy at less than that. Try upping it, my Dell Inspiron 8000 with bconway> 15" screen looks crisp (and correct) at 1400x1050 but gets fuzzy at bconway> 1280x1024 and less. I'm not sure the real technical details on how those bconway> suckers work, that's just my experience. Yes, LCD's always run at the same resolution (the max that they advertise usually). To get the other "resolutions" there are two methods: 1. Use only the center area of the screen to display smaller resolutions. The border around the image is black. 1 pixel at the resolution you chose == 1 real pixel on the LCD. 2. Stretch the requested resolution to fill the entire area of the LCD. This method, obviously, must always look fuzzy, since you are using more than one "real" pixel to display a simulated pixel. 1 pixel at the resolution you chose > 1 real pixel on the LCD. You can usually select which method you want to use in the system BIOS. -- Charles R. Anderson <cra@wpi.edu> / http://angus.ind.wpi.edu/~cra/ PGP Key ID: 49BB5886 Fingerprint: EBA3 A106 7C93 FA07 8E15 3AC2 C367 A0F9 49BB 5886