16.3 Installing and Configuring a Display
Physically
installing a CRT monitor or FPD requires only connecting its video
cable to the video adapter and plugging the monitor into the wall
receptacle. The steps required to adjust the CRT monitor or FPD for
best image quality vary according to the specific monitor you use.
See the monitor manual for specific instructions.
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to use the monitor optimally vary by operating system, as described
in the following sections.
16.3.1 Configuring a Display Under Linux
The setup utility in recent Linux
distributions probes the video adapter and display to determine their
capabilities and automatically configures optimum video settings.
Setup prompts you to confirm the hardware it detects and to choose
display settings such as resolution and color depth. To change the
display type, log on as root and run Xconfigurator or whatever
equivalent GUI utility your distribution provides. For example, the
Mandrake Control Center, shown in Figure 16-4,
allows you to select among hundreds of standard displays.
Figure 16-4. Using Mandrake Control Center to reconfigure display type

If your display is not listed, you can define a custom display type.
Before you do that, check the manual to determine the combinations of
resolution and refresh frequency that the monitor can support. For a
digital FPD, also take color depth into account. Choose the optimum
combination for your needs, define the display properly, and then
configure the video adapter to use the settings you chose (see Chapter 15).
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16.3.2 Configuring a Display Under Windows 9X/2000/XP
Windows
9X/2000/XP detects Plug-and-Play monitors and automatically
configures the correct settings for them, both when that monitor was
present during Setup and, at the next restart, when you install a new
Plug-and-Play monitor. For non-Plug-and-Play monitors, Windows uses
the Standard Monitor, which displays only standard VGA resolution.
Monitor type is configured from Display Properties
Settings
Changing monitor type manually uses the same Update Device Driver
Wizard described in Chapter 15, but the search
options are less useful for monitors than adapters.Windows enables Automatically detect Plug & Play monitors by
default. With some display adapters, enabling this setting causes the
monitor to flicker during detection each time the system starts. This
is harmless, but some people find it disconcerting. If
that's the case, once your monitor is installed
properly you can safely clear this checkbox.Windows also enables Reset display on suspend/resume by default. This
setting causes Windows to send a reset to the monitor each time you
resume from Suspend mode. This causes annoying flickering with most
video adapters, but disabling it can cause problems with some
monitors, including inability to resume because the monitor never
"wakes up" from Suspend mode. If
you decide to disable this function and this problem occurs, the only
option is to restart the computer and re-enable this setting. Note
that even with this setting enabled, some configurations fail to
resume from Suspend mode. If that occurs, the only solution we know
of is to disable power management for video functions.If Windows does not detect the monitor model (or detects the wrong
model), use the Update Device Driver Wizard to select the proper
monitor model from among those supported by Windows or to install a
driver provided by the monitor manufacturer.