Oh it's definately not a "native" 1920x1440 monitor.  But the 1080i spec is 
1920x1080, the COMPONENT input on the TV down converts it to the TV's Native 
resolution (which is really EDTV at 852x480, it's an old Panasonic 
CT-34WX50).  Still, the input expects to see the signal in its native (close 
to native) form.  I suspect that the 6600GT is doing something for me there 
as this simply works.  In Dual Head mode I have to output 480i to facilitate 
both monitors in the virtual screen.

On Monday 14 February 2005 20:27, Brad Templeton wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 14, 2005 at 08:17:26PM -0700, Blair wrote:
> > On Monday 14 February 2005 19:53, Brad Templeton wrote:
> > I'm just outputing 1920x1440 (a native X modeline) and letting X take
> > care of it for me.  Haven't been tweeking though maybe I should?  I've
> > just been letting the X virtual windowing handle the extra for me and
> > scaling Myth to display in the visible portion of the display.
>
> That's pretty unusual.  There are plenty of HDTVs out there but I did not
> know any take 1920 x 1440 and do something right with it.  Or is this
> one of those 4:3 HDTVs like the Sony?   I mean you are feeding 1440 lines
> to it, those CRTs are the only ones I heard of taking that sort of
> resolution native at least.

-- 
-Blair Preston
Principle Systems Architect

"The best way to predict the future, is to invent it"
-Alan Kay 
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