On 14/01/2001 23:00, Dénes Bogsányi ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> on 15/1/01 4:38, Bryan Harris at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>>
>>> of a tired battery is the date and time going haywire. (Another question I
>>> just thought of - is there anywhere it's possible to change the frequency of
>>> the screen? This is useful for me in tv-production and sometimes having to
>>> film the screen with a camera set to 60 hz)
>>
>>
>> Try holding down "control" when you click on the Monitor Resolution control
>> strip. This might let you choose the 60Hz option if it's available.
>>
>> - B
>>
> It sounds to me as a "gaussing" problem. Older monitors used to have this
> problem and had a "degaussing button" to take care of it. I do not know how
> this problem is dealt with on new monitors.
What is Gaussing and what can be done about it. I seem to have discovered
tah the trouble has to do with IE5. IE's been on the machine for a long
time, and I've never had trouble, but it des look like this thing could be
coming from there.
Carsten
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