On Mon, Nov 04, 2002 at 09:22:15PM +0100, Manuel Bilderbeek wrote: > Blars Blarson wrote: > >In article <[🔎] 3DC6CCC7.60506@msxnet.org> manuel@msxnet.org writes: > >[ghosting] > > > >This is usually caused by a problem with your monitor or the cable to > >it. If you can, try a different (shorter and/or higher quality) > >cable. If you are using a switch box, try without. > > > >This problem may be more pronounced at some colors than others, so > >changing backgrounds may cause it to be less noticable. > > I don't think it is the cable, since: > 1) I used the original cable that came with my Iyama A902MT monitor, > which is brand new > 2) the problem only occurs in X, not in textmode or in Windows (sorry > for that) Those don't necessarily rule out signal degradation. 1) Iiyama may have given you a lousy cable; 2) Windows may not be cranking the signal as hard, and textmode almost certainly isn't. Ghosting is less of a problem at lower pixel clocks. I don't know enough about field effects and signal stuff to know exactly why, but this has been my experience. -- G. Branden Robinson | Good judgement comes from Debian GNU/Linux | experience; experience comes from branden@debian.org | bad judgement. http://people.debian.org/~branden/ | -- Fred Brooks
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