Viewsonic Va2226w Drivers For Mac
I've got a 19' ViewSonic here and also had the 'Resolution' nag problem. You'll need to use the buttons that are on the monitor to fix this. Mathplayer for mac.
Not the keyboard but the actual buttons that are on the monitor casing. ON this monitor, press button number 1,(on the left) brings up a menu with options. Use the down arrow button (number 3 or 4) to select the 'Setup Menu' selection. Then use the down arrow button again to navigate to the 'Resolution Notice' selection. Use the number 2 button to select it.
Use the up or down arrow to select OFF, then press button number 2 to select that option. Press the number 1 button twice to then escape both screens, one at a time.
Hope this helps. If you set your computer's screen resolution to the native resolution of the screen, and since you have the VA2226w I would bet that is 1680x1050, that would avoid the error messages.
BUT, and you have already mentioned that your eyes like whatever resolution you have now is set larger for an eyesight issue, you THEN CHANGE the DPI (the Window's screen DPI) to make things larger on the screen. The advantage is then your screen will most likely be as clear as can be made, and everything on the screen will be large, for your eyes. It really is the best compromise. How to change the screen's DPI depends upon your (assuming) Windows operating system. With most Windows desktops you just right-click an open area of your desktop, and select (in WinXP) Properties or (in Vista) Personalize. In WinXP, you then select the 'Settings' tab, then the Advanced button.
There you adjust the DPI setting from the default setting of 96 DPI, to 120 DPI, or even use the Custom slider. In Vista, you then select from the left side 'Adjust font size (DPI)' and adjust the 'DPI Scaling' to a larger number. The default is probably 96 DPI. Make it 120, or select the Custom DPI button to make it almost anything you want.
Not all webpages take their sizing info from the DPI resolution setting from Windows. Sometimes, I think, they use the actual screen resolution (the native setting). For those pages, if you have a high resolution screen, the text will be pretty small - or, at least, highly detailed. Yahoo Email, new Email style, is like that. I have a laptop computer with a 1920x1200 15' screen, you want to see some very small text!! That is the same resolution as my 26' LCD screen. 1920x1200 resolution on a 26' screen is about 90 pixels per inch, but on a 15' screen it is nearly 150 pixels per inch.
Viewsonic Va2226w Drivers For Macbook Pro
With my 26' screen I do not mind the reading of the Yahoo Email, but on that laptop it gets pretty small. So, on the laptop, I generally temporarily switch over to Yahoo Mail Classic which is not as affected by really fine screen resolution. Maybe you have some similar options for what you are doing.