Unrelated topic kinda
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
My GEM LCD (I originally typed "LSD" - yikes!) monitor displays "No Signal" for a few minutes, then goes to "Off". It may be something in the monitor setup itself, that is, the menu that is accessible from the controls on the monitor itself, like the ones to adjust the screen width/height /position (and independent of the card and drivers).
Another simple remedy is to buy a power strip or power station and turn everything off.
Another simple remedy is to buy a power strip or power station and turn everything off.
It is better, of course, to know useless things than to know nothing. - Seneca
Gary, you're right. All modern screens store their settings in NVRAM (like any number of other peripheral & mobile devices) which are programmable through some form of on-screen display. The only condition under which a driver would have anything to do with PM modes on a monitor is if some functional part of the software was the ONLY way to program the LCD's NVRAM. If the video adapter is broken/screwy that could certainly cause the aberrant PM behaviour, but otherwise monitors do not "acclimate" to video adapters.
The fact that the thing doesn't display/work correctly in Windows might be a driver issue. Couple that with the strange PM stuff and you've probably got a wonky video adapter. For those of you who don't speak computer-ese, "wonky" is a technical term.
Hope it all works out, WHATEVER the solution may be, Ken!!
The fact that the thing doesn't display/work correctly in Windows might be a driver issue. Couple that with the strange PM stuff and you've probably got a wonky video adapter. For those of you who don't speak computer-ese, "wonky" is a technical term.
Hope it all works out, WHATEVER the solution may be, Ken!!
Sytý Hladovému Nevěří
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ken_swearingen
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- Posts: 2298
- Joined: Wed Mar 31, 2004 6:00 pm
get an iMac - thats my solution

The email address shown is down, you can email me at [email protected]
i got mine 6 years ago now.....the little blueberry bubble...still works like new.
The email address shown is down, you can email me at [email protected]
I started with a 512Ke in 1984. Now I have a Dual 2Ghz G5 with 8 GBs RAM (Pro Tools setup), an iBook G4 and an iMac G5. My wife has a flat panel iMac. I am the IT manager of a small engineering company based in Chicago with offices in the Chicago suburbs and Jackson, MS. All PC except our servers (Mac OSX and Red Hat Linux) and me. I use an old Sawtooth at work. Just to keep it on topic - I also love my 4003/s5 I just bought from Jeff Rath.
I tend to view the mac as the Rickenbacker of the computing world - that is, it makes up only a small percentage but is ultimately better.
Family's first mac was an LC, back in 1990 when i was only 5 years old haha. several machines later and we have an imac G5, powerbook G4, ibook G3 (all for graphics buisness)...and i have my blue bubble imac.
Before mac's my family had an Amiga 500
no pc's for me thank you!
Family's first mac was an LC, back in 1990 when i was only 5 years old haha. several machines later and we have an imac G5, powerbook G4, ibook G3 (all for graphics buisness)...and i have my blue bubble imac.
Before mac's my family had an Amiga 500
no pc's for me thank you!
The email address shown is down, you can email me at [email protected]
Gary dont start me on marathon!!
this could get dangerous
(ps macworld gave away all 3 games free on the cover Cd haha)
this could get dangerous (ps macworld gave away all 3 games free on the cover Cd haha)
The email address shown is down, you can email me at [email protected]
One of things Iike about this forum and Rickenbackers in general is I feel very at home with people who realize what others don't - Ric's (and Mac's) are just better. It might be impossible to explain to neophytes who have never had the pleasure of really playing a Rickenbacker (or using a Mac) but we know....People here are very similiar to Mac fanatics - and I love it.
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ken_swearingen
- Advanced Member
- Posts: 2298
- Joined: Wed Mar 31, 2004 6:00 pm
I loved my MAC .... I'd to go back to the simplicity again in a heartbeat.
The first computer I operated, circa 73, an IBM 1130, with 8, yes a whole EIGHT thousand bytes of memory. No keyboard, operands and commands were entered in Hex via a 8x4 32 switch ( 32 bits-8 Bytes, one word ) array. Output was to a similar set of 32 lights. You got to be able to read and write in Hex really well !!!!
The first computer I operated, circa 73, an IBM 1130, with 8, yes a whole EIGHT thousand bytes of memory. No keyboard, operands and commands were entered in Hex via a 8x4 32 switch ( 32 bits-8 Bytes, one word ) array. Output was to a similar set of 32 lights. You got to be able to read and write in Hex really well !!!!
"It's Red Jim, but not as we know it...."

