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ghosting on LCD flatpanel through KVM switch

ghosting on LCD flatpanel through KVM switch

2004-02-25       - By Wolfgang Gill

 Back
Reply:     1     2     3     4     5     6     7  

I've found these to be good. And they allow FULL mouse & keyboard detection,
and bi-directional comms. (They will give you battery status on Cordless
Keyboards & Mice) Plus these are great with high res Monitors

http://catalog.belkin.com/IWCatProductPage.process?Merchant_Id=
<http://catalog.belkin.com/IWCatProductPage.process?Merchant_Id=&Section_Id=
201725&pcount=&Product_Id=161720>
&Section_Id=201725&pcount=&Product_Id=161720

Wolf

-- --Original Message-- --
From: shrike-list-admin@(protected) [mailto:shrike-list-admin@(protected)] On
Behalf Of Rick von Richter
Sent: Thursday, 26 February 2004 3:58 AM
To: shrike-list@(protected)
Subject: Re: ghosting on LCD flatpanel through KVM switch



If you ever find an optimal KVM please let me know because I have looked
high and low and can't find one.   I use a 24" Sun LCD and the biggest beef
is the KVM won't support the right frequency at higher resolutions. The
second is that the KVM won't properly transmit the video identifier signals
to the OS so Linux says something like "I have no idea what display you
have". Same goes for Solaris or WinCrap.
IF everything is perfect when the display is directly connected to the
computer then make sure the video cable is lying in the same physical spot
as when it is connected to the KVM (i.e. don't lay it next to a bunch of
power cables when you connect it to the KVM).  If all that is OK then I know
Black Box has an in-line video sequencer (I think sequencer is the correct
name, not sure).  Anyways, it goes in-line on your video cable and you can
tweak all sorts of video signals to get desired effects.  Don't know it will
help your sit.
As fas a KVMs go I've always used Cybex (now called Avocent).  They seem to
have the better products.  But when the whole industry product (KVMs) in
general are less then optimal that is not quite a grand distinction.  Plus,
they cost more than most. Sigh...

HTH, HAND

Blaise Canzian wrote:


Has anyone experienced sub-optimal display on a Sony Viewsonic 18" LCD
flatpanel through a KVM switch?  The KVM switch I have is pretty cheap.  The
fonts are ghosted, although the redhat-config-xfree86 finds the monitor
correctly.

BTW, I have the resolution configured to match the LCD display's native
resolution, this is definitely a KVM-related problem, not something else
(i.e., display is perfect if the video feed from the nVidia GeForce2 card on
a VGA cable goes directly to the display and not through the KVM switch).
Oh, I'm running VGA not DVI.

Thanks.

-- Blaise Canzian





--

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Rick von Richter  IS Production Support Manager    Voice: 858-831-2222

rickv@(protected) <mailto:rickv@(protected)>      Maintenance Warehouse/Home Depot
Fax: 858-831-2221

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

  The box says: Win98, WinNT or BETTER. That's why I installed Linux.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


######################################################################
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Any views or opinions presented are solely those of the author.

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<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
<HTML><HEAD>
<META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=us-ascii">
<TITLE>Message</TITLE>

<META content="MSHTML 6.00.2800.1400" name=GENERATOR></HEAD>
<BODY text=#000000 bgColor=#cccccc>
<DIV><SPAN class=036100203-26022004><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff size=2>I've
found these to be good. And they allow FULL mouse &amp; keyboard detection, and
bi-directional comms. (They will give you battery status on Cordless Keyboards
&amp; Mice) Plus these are great with high res Monitors</FONT></SPAN></DIV>
<DIV><SPAN class=036100203-26022004><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2></FONT></SPAN>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><SPAN class=036100203-26022004><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff size=2><A
href="http://catalog.belkin.com/IWCatProductPage.process?Merchant_Id=&amp
;Section_Id=201725&amp;pcount=&amp;Product_Id=161720">http://catalog.belkin.com
/IWCatProductPage.process?Merchant_Id=&amp;Section_Id=201725&amp;pcount=&amp
;Product_Id=161720</A></FONT></SPAN></DIV>
<DIV><SPAN class=036100203-26022004><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2></FONT></SPAN>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><SPAN class=036100203-26022004><FONT face=Arial color=#0000ff
size=2>Wolf</FONT></SPAN></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=Tahoma><FONT size=2><SPAN class=036100203-26022004><FONT
face=Arial color=#0000ff>&nbsp;</FONT></SPAN></FONT></FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=Tahoma><FONT size=2><SPAN
class=036100203-26022004>&nbsp;</SPAN>-- --Original Message-- --<BR><B>From:</B
>
shrike-list-admin@(protected) [mailto:shrike-list-admin@(protected)] <B>On Behalf
Of </B>Rick von Richter<BR><B>Sent:</B> Thursday, 26 February 2004 3:58
AM<BR><B>To:</B> shrike-list@(protected)<BR><B>Subject:</B> Re: ghosting on LCD
flatpanel through KVM switch<BR><BR></DIV></FONT></FONT>
<BLOCKQUOTE dir=ltr style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"><TT>If you ever find an optimal
 KVM please let me know because I have looked high and low and can't find
 one.&nbsp;&nbsp; I use a 24" Sun LCD and the biggest beef is the KVM won't
 support the right frequency at higher resolutions. The second is that the KVM
 won't properly transmit the video identifier signals to the OS so Linux says
 something like "I have no idea what display you have". Same goes for Solaris
 or WinCrap.<BR>IF everything is perfect when the display is directly
connected
 to the computer then make sure the video cable is lying in the same physical
 spot as when it is connected to the KVM (i.e. don't lay it next to a bunch of
 power cables when you connect it to the KVM).&nbsp; If all that is OK then I
 know Black Box has an in-line video sequencer (I think sequencer is the
 correct name, not sure).&nbsp; Anyways, it goes in-line on your video cable
 and you can tweak all sorts of video signals to get desired effects.&nbsp;
 Don't know it will help your sit.<BR>As fas a KVMs go I've always used Cybex
 (now called Avocent).&nbsp; They seem to have the better products.&nbsp; But
 when the whole industry product (KVMs) in general are less then optimal that
 is not quite a grand distinction.&nbsp; Plus, they cost more than most.
 Sigh...<BR><BR>HTH, HAND<BR></TT><BR>Blaise Canzian wrote:<BR>
 <BLOCKQUOTE cite=mid4034FF20.40602@(protected) type="cite">Has anyone
   experienced sub-optimal display on a Sony Viewsonic 18" LCD flatpanel
   through a KVM switch?&nbsp; The KVM switch I have is pretty cheap. &nbsp
;The
   fonts are ghosted, although the redhat-config-xfree86 finds the monitor
   correctly. <BR><BR>BTW, I have the resolution configured to match the LCD
   display's native resolution, this is definitely a KVM-related problem, not
   something else (i.e., display is perfect if the video feed from the nVidia
   GeForce2 card on a VGA cable goes directly to the display and not through
   the KVM switch).&nbsp; Oh, I'm running VGA not DVI. <BR><BR>Thanks.
   <BR><BR>-- Blaise Canzian <BR><BR><BR></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><PRE class=moz
-signature cols="72">--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Rick von Richter  IS Production Support Manager    Voice: 858-831-2222
<A class=moz-txt-link-abbreviated href="mailto:rickv@(protected)">rickv@(protected)</A
>     Maintenance Warehouse/Home Depot   Fax: 858-831-2221
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  The box says: Win98, WinNT or BETTER. That's why I installed Linux.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~</PRE><
/BLOCKQUOTE>
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This e-mail is privileged and confidential. If you are not the<BR>
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Any views or opinions presented are solely those of the author.<BR>
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