Thanks to everybody who replied to my question - I'll try it out this 
evening.but so far from what people have said it should npt be a problem

Paul Newton


mrgmhale wrote:
> My 18 month old HP Pavilion laptop (Z2000) has an external VGA port that can
> be set up as either a mirror display for the primary panel, or for
> independent dual monitor display for disparate display purposes.  The main
> LCD panel has a max resolution of 1024 x 768, but the external port if
> configured as an independent 2nd display dual monitor (non-mirrored) can go
> to 1280 x 1024.  This is fairly typical of laptops with external VGA ports
> over the past 2-3 years, depending on the manufacturer and model.  I
> normally use my 2nd laptop VGA port for independent display purposes with
> either an external 19" LCD monitor when visiting my parents (and setting up
> shop at their place), or with my BenQ DLP projector for presentation
> purposes.  It does a great job for me, very nice feature.
>
> I have seen a device at CompUSA that will create a dual monitor output port
> via a USB connection (v-2.0 USB port I am certain), and is meant for use
> with laptops primarily.  I did not pay much attention to it, other than a
> passing thought re: how slow it must be compared to a regular PCI or AGP
> video card.  Then again, a slow 2nd monitor is better than no 2nd monitor at
> all.
>
> I have a few dual-head adapters on my tower PCs.  They are simply video
> cards with 2 separate output ports, one port per monitor.  Often one is a
> standard 15 pin VGA port, and the other is a Digital port.  The digital port
> is easy enough to convert to a standard VGA 15 pin output via a
> Digital-to-VGA converter.  I had to do that with every one of my dual-head
> VGA cards.  I had tried using two separate video cards in my workstation PCs
> at first, one in a PCI slot, the other in a AGP slot.  They worked almost
> well enough, but I would run into apparent driver conflicts, even if the
> brands were the same.  I finally opted to simply go with single AGP slot
> video cards with dual ports (dual-head).  Everything has been great since
> then.  I went with 256 - 512 Mg cards, nothing smaller than 256Mg (128Mg per
> head/port).  Note, however, I do not do any gaming.  If you do gaming, or
> need really fast performance, you are going to pay through a bloody nose for
> high performance dual-head video cards.
>
> As an aside, I have used both nVidea and Radeon technology based cards.
> Both work well for my purposes.
>
> Finally, for some really nice control of the dual monitors I licensed
> UltraMon, which allows home users to use a single license for use with
> multiple PCs.  I am able to get some really nice display options beyond
> those that Windows provides.  It was inexpensive to license, and well worth
> the investment at twice the price (or more).
>
> Good Luck!
>
>
> Gil
>
>   
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Paul Newton
>> Sent: Wednesday, October 17, 2007 4:54 AM
>> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> Subject: [NF] Dual monitors
>>
>>
>> Hi al
>>
>> I know that many of you have the luxury of dual monitor setups and I
>> believe that these work either (i) using the MB display adapter and a
>> second adapter or (ii) without the MB display adapter but with a
>> dual-head adapter ?
>>
>> Can anybody tell me whether it is possible to achieve a simlar setup
>> with a laptop, using the built-in screen and a monitor attached to the
>> external display port, or will the external display always be the same
>> as what's on the built-in screen ?
>>
>> Paul Newton
>>
>>
>>
>>     
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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