Stop Microsoft
Miscellaneous => Technical Support => Topic started by: GenuineAdvantage on 17 April 2006, 09:02
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Is there anything I can do so fullscreen video shows up with a standard aspect ratio in widescreen? On linux or even windows.
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I think mplayer will let you do it ... I've never tried so I can't be sure it works.
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That's not what I meant. I should have been more clear sorry. Not video as in movies. But the whole video screen. As in the desktop. For games that are made for 4:3 for example.
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So, wait...you want 4:3 resolutions to be horizontally stretched across your widescreen monitor? Or it that how it is, and you want the 4:3 resolution to appear in the middle of your screen letterboxed?
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4:3 resolutions already stretch. I want it to appear in the middle instead, yes.
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Well, that function can depend on what monitor Windows thinks you have. If it says "Plug and Play Monitor," then it probably won't let you. Perhaps there's a disk or CD that came with it? Perhaps that'll let you do what you're asking.
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Some monitors let you set the resolution to a non-widescreen format ... this means that it should produce the same effect as somehow using a program to modify output to the screen. Hopefully it won't strectch the image. I remember that on my monitor, 4:3 ratio, I could set the resolution so that it appeared widescreen ... so I suppose the opposite may be possible (there were empty black bars at top and bottom)
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I didn't get a CD with the monitor, it was a gift which just came as it was. If there's a feature to put black bars on the sides, I haven't figured it out. I am hoping there is some software that will fake this. If it was a CRT, I could probably fake it by shrinking it horizontally, but it's LCD...
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I got something, but it's rough. Or maybe that is the only way. I used pixel timer and phase to shrink the picture. It saves these settings for each resolution, so it's fine. I have no way of knowing if it's a perfect match though, I just eyeballed it.
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what about trying the manufactoror's site ?
and you might find a "Generic" wide-screen driver that will let you
shrink the picture to another ratio