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Windows
Coping with large monitors and high
resolutions
High resolution means small icons and text,
doesn’t it? Not so, says David Dorn – not when you’ve read this,
anyway!
Now
that large monitors are relatively cheap, on-screen resolutions of
1280x1024 and 1600x1200 are within most PC users’ grasp, yet many
folks whose kit can get up to these heady figures don’t go there.
The reason? Because, unless you know what you’re doing icons, text
and other screen furniture can be rendered as tiny-weeny and
difficult to see.
Maybe that’s down to the way the Display
applet in Control Panel works, in that the Resolution slider (in all
Windows versions) doesn’t automatically lead to anything that
changes the size of screen furniture.
Such a control does exist, though, and it’s usually
to be found under the Advanced button in the
Settings tab of the Display control. Clicking
on that button usually leads directly to it, in fact
Variable
This is where things get somewhat vague, as each
different graphics adapter can cause its own peculiar set of
settings to be available in this section of the Display settings
controls, so there’s no one way to do things.
In general, though, the higher the Dots Per Inch
setting, the larger your text, icons and other bits of on-screen
furniture will become. So, changing the setting from Normal (96 DPI)
to Large Size (120 DPI) will increase the size of things markedly,
making them easier to read and identify. On most systems, there’s
also a Custom setting, the use of which can be extremely handy:
When
you select this, a Ruler pops up, together with a settings
drop-down. If you’re wanting to display pages in your word processor
that are exactly life-sized, you can hold a normal ruler (Imperial
measurement only – none of these new-fangled centimetres) up to the
screen and drag the on-screen ruler about until the measurements
match. Very handy!
For a
step-through guide, in pictures, click here
- we'll bring you right back here when you've seen it.
Why?
No doubt you’ll be wondering why it’s worth going
through all this palaver when, by selecting a lower resolution,
everything gets bigger anyway.
It’s simple – using a higher resolution and then
selecting a higher DPI setting puts more on-screen dots (pixels)
into every character, thus making them look sharper and getting rid
of some of the jagged lines that make up every bit of screen
furniture. So, you create a much sharper image on-screen than would
otherwise be the case. Bear in mind that at 1600x1200, a real square
inch of screen will hold four times the number of pixels that the
same area in 800x600 would. Thus everything has to be sharper.
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