http://www.pcworld.com/howto/article/0,aid,124858,pg,1,00.aspKirk Steers
From the May 2006 issue of PC World magazine
Posted Friday, March 17, 2006
Improve Your Image: 13 Simple Graphics Tweaks
Some small adjustments to your LCD monitor can make a big difference in picture quality.
Think about this: You spend almost as much time in front of a computer monitor as you do sleeping. Shouldn't you do everything you can to make your viewing as comfortable and trouble-free as possible? If you've recently upgraded to an LCD monitor, you should know that tuning one of these devices is not the same as tweaking a CRT display's settings. Although the following tips focus primarily on LCDs, many of the settings and steps apply equally to CRTs.
No matter what type of monitor you're using, much of the quality of the image it shows depends on your computer's graphics card or chip set. Start by making sure you have the latest version of the driver for your graphics adapter; this is one of the easiest and most effective ways to optimize your graphics and avoid hardware hassles.
Don't bother using Device Manager's Update Driver option, which works fine for other drivers but is useless for updating your video card's software. Instead, browse to your graphics card vendor's Web site, look for a "Downloads" or "Support" link, and find the driver for your card's make and model. Stay away from beta versions of drivers that may be listed on the manufacturer's Web site. These are works in progress that are an invitation to troublesome PC behavior.
You configure your graphics card or chip set through Windows' Display Properties: Right-click the desktop and choose Properties to open this dialog box. The settings that you'll see vary from system to system and are determined by the installed driver, but all graphics adapters offer several important settings:
Screen resolution: On CRT monitors, the screen resolution--the number of dots, or pixels, that run vertically and horizontally across your screen--is scalable; you can raise or lower resolution settings without affecting image quality, so you can pick any supported resolution that pleases you. The same isn't true for LCDs, however, as they have a fixed number of pixels that define the display's native resolution. You'll see the monitor's best-looking, full-screen images only when it is set to that resolution.
Most 15-inch LCDs have a native resolution of 1024 by 768 pixels, while 17- and 19-inch LCDs usually are 1280 by 1024. Any setting lower than the native resolution results either in letterboxing, which maintains image quality by shrinking the image to a compatible size, or interpolation, which keeps a full-screen image but adjusts for missing pixels, often sacrificing image quality as a result. The exception is when the lower resolution is half the native resolution, such as 800 by 600 pixels for a native resolution of 1600 by 1200; in this case, the resulting image is neither letterboxed nor interpolated.
Even though some LCDs have scaling algorithms that do a good job of smoothing images displayed at nonnative resolutions, you should always set the monitor to its native resolution. To do so, click the Settings tab in the Display Properties dialog box and adjust the slider under 'Screen resolution' (see Figure 1). Assuming Windows has properly detected your monitor, the native resolution will be the highest resolution available to you.
Color quality: The more colors your monitor shows, the more realistic its images. Most PCs have the power required to support the highest setting, usually labeled 32-bit. But if you're experiencing sluggish graphics performance (especially if your PC uses system RAM for both graphics and standard computing duties, as many low-cost machines do), reduce the color setting to speed things up.
Refresh rate: The annoying screen flicker of many CRTs is due to a refresh rate that's set too low. (Images on a CRT are constantly redrawn, or "refreshed," by an electron beam that zigzags across the screen.) Conventional wisdom says a CRT needs to be refreshed more than 72 times per second, or 72 Hz, to avoid causing eyestrain. Experiment to determine the setting that works best for you and your eyes; this may not be the highest setting the monitor supports.
With LCDs, screen flicker isn't an issue because the devices don't refresh the entire screen, just the pixels that change. A refresh rate of 40 to 60 Hz should be fine for an LCD, unless its manufacturer says otherwise. What may be an issue to some LCD users, and especially gamers, is the pixel response time of the display, which is the time a single pixel requires to change from black to white and then back to black. Older LCDs have pixel response times slower than 20 milliseconds, which leads to ghosting of rapidly moving images. Most LCDs sold today are said to be faster, but before you buy an LCD for gaming, read Laura Blackwell's "LCD Specs: Not So Swift."