1200x1920 Portrait is what you want (not 1920x1200 which is landscape)
Then 'Identify' You should see a giant 1 on main monitor and 2 on second. Screens go black! You then get time to revert to previous setting.
I think Win 7 has correct drivers for portrait resolution.Ĭonnect second monitor - you'll see the same display on both screens.Ĭontrol Panel>Appearance and Personalization>Display> Extend these displays. You have one digital output and one analogue - connect main monitor to digital. If it's a laptop you should have a similar socket at the back. Also known as Susan L Hoover, Sue Garritan. Related To Victoria Garritan, Loretta Garritan, Dennis Garritan, Victor Garritan, Thomas Garritan. Look where your current monitor cable is connected to the desk top - if you see a similar socket next to it then it supports dual monitors. Lived In New York NY, Greenwich CT, Brooklyn NY, Croton On Hudson NY. Posted by Michael Schmitt - 11 Nov 06:59PM Windows 7 Pro - Intel Core Duo (1.4 Ghz) - 4GB Memory The settings menu offers both options, landscape and portrait, so is it as easy as that? Buy a pivotable monitor, connect it to my computer, change the settings to portrait and a full page of an orchestra score will be visible from piccolo to contrabass without having to scroll down? (Sorry for the naivety of my question).
I've had the same question and have recently checked several pivotable monitors on the net (EIZO and Samsung), it seems that there are quite a lot of different options.Īs it's a while ago since I last worked with an extra monitor at all and I'm not really familiar with specifications of graphic cards, could you give me some advice on how to find out whether my card will support the pivot function? > If you have the latter already, you're most of the way there. A video card with Rotate options in its drivers.