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Active1 year, 8 months ago

I am using a 32 inch LCD TV as a PC monitor.And I have NVIDIA GeForce 8400 GS graphics card.

But unfortunately the highest resolution offered in my display settings is 1360x768.

I want to know whats the reason. I suspect the following 3:

  1. Limitation of LCD TV
  2. Limitation of Graphics Card
  3. Limitation of Driver Software / some settings fine-tuning

I wish to have much higher resolution than 1360x768.

ThaleThale

5 Answers

The answer is fairly simple, but not always easy to explain. The highest resolution your TV supports is 720p (1360x768). Your video card (great card, card is not an issue) can support much higher resolutions, but has detected the highest resolution of your TV and therefore limited the settings to 1360x768, which is the best resolution your TV can display perfectly.

Anything higher would NOT make the picture better (since the number of pixels is limited by the TV hardware / screen) but it could (and would) make it worse since a resolution that is not an exact multiple of the hardware resolution would force a conversion that would sacrifice clarity for completeness.

Imagine trying to display a picture of the letter 'T' with only 4 pixels. You would either wind up with two black on top and two white on bottom, or four black, or three black and one white. In any case, the 'T' would not look like a 'T', and would instead look like a dash or a square or an upside down 'L'. You could, however, display a 'T' easily with 9 pixels (three black across the top row, one black in the middle position in the second row, and one black in the middle position in the third row).

As you increase the resolution, items on the screen get smaller, so the 'T' would eventually get so small that there would only be 4 pixels trying to display it, resulting in an unreadable letter. Now imagine that with a face in a crowd, or the detail of a photo. Things start to look worse, not better, as the resolution increases beyond what the hardware can support.

My advice to you is to either stick with 1360x768, which is the absolute best your TV can do based on the laws of physics, or get a monitor or TV that can support a higher resolution.

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JesseJesse

LCDs generally tend to best run at a fixed resolution - which is the native resolution of the screen, and 1360x786 is a common one for '720P' screens. As long as your video card and system detected it properly, that should be the native resolution for the screen in question.

Video cards easily handle 1920x1080 or full HD, so with the latest drivers, your graphics card and driver shouldn't be the issue.

If its a full HD screen, playing around with your connection methods (HDMI is best, failing which DVI failing which VGA and so on) might help

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You didn't mentioned what is your native screen resolution but when you use a digital screen it's usually the first suspect on your list. But my new flat screen also offered a higher virtual resolution thus it can be also a driver problem. The Geforce 8400 GS should go much higher. I think it depends on how much video ram it has. You can use Powerstrip to control that. Maybe you can use Powerstrip to unlock higher resolution.

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Some LCD TVs publish sub-standard resolution over VGA and HDMIYou can make custom resolution with nvidia driver, or use one offered by windows.e,g my philips HD TV shows 1280x600 as default, when it works just fine with 1360x768 but on the box it has 1366x768 in which case it gets resized with desktop sides out of screen.. It is just trial and error..

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Funai Tv Driver

I have smart philips tv 32 inch as monitor, you must find modus to change refresh rate above standard 60 Hz (it depence of grafic card) in my case I change it to 80 Hz refresh rate and resolution Edward bernays propaganda pdf.

BaneBane

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Funai Electric Company, Ltd
Native name
Romanized name
Funai Denki kabushiki gaisha
Traded asTYO: 6839
Founded1961; 58 years ago
FounderTetsuro Funai
Headquarters
Daitō, Osaka
,
Key people
Hideaki Funakoshi
(President and CEO)
Revenue¥246,100 million (2012)[1]
OwnerFunai family (39.39%)
2,861 (2011)
Websitewww.funai.jp/

Funai Electric Co., Ltd. (船井電機株式会社Funai Denki Kabushiki Kaisha) is a Japaneseconsumer electronics company headquartered in Daitō, Osaka, Japan. Its United States-based subsidiary Funai Corporation, Inc., based in Torrance, California, markets Funai products in the US along with Funai-licensed brands including Magnavox, Emerson Radio, and Sanyo.[2]

Funai is the main supplier of electronics to Walmart and Sam's Club stores in the US,[citation needed] with production output in excess of 2 million flat-panel televisions during the summertime per year for Black Friday sale. Funai is the OEM providing assembled televisions and video players/recorders to major corporations such as Sharp, Toshiba, Denon, and others.[citation needed] Funai also manufactures printers for Dell and Lexmark and produces printers under the Kodak name.

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  • 1History

History[edit]

Funai was founded by Tetsuro Funai, the son of a sewing machine manufacturer. During the 1950s before the company was formed, Funai produced sewing machines and was one of the first Japanese makers to enter the United States retail market. Digital signage software windows 10. Then, the introduction of transistor technology had begun to change the face of the electronics market. The Funai company was formed, Tetsuro Funai became CEO for 47 years and a US dollar billionaire, and the first actual products produced were the transistor radios.

In 1980, Funai launched a sales and manufacturing subsidiary in Germany. Funai also developed the Compact Video Cassette (CVC) format in the same year, a joint development with Technicolor, trying to compete with VHS and Betamax. Sales were poor and not well-received due to ongoing VHS vs. Beta war, and the CVC format was abandoned a few years later.

Funai began to see rising sales of the VHS format, so in 1984, Funai released its first VHS video cassette player (VP-1000) for the worldwide market, while ordering all transport chassis mechanisms from Shintom for quick and efficient production. By the late 1980s, Funai quickly became the largest 2-head mono VHS video cassette recorder (VCR) manufacturer in Japan.

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In 1991, a U.S. sales subsidiary was established in New Jersey, and it began to sell cathode ray tube (CRT) televisions. In 1992, Funai canceled its contract from Shintom due to the rising cost of VCR chassis mechanism and the expensive Japanese labor, and decided to build its own lower-cost chassis mechanism instead. This creative move dramatically boosted up profits and reduced VCR prices down fast. Funai developed a new, permanent strategy in 1993 by opening two new state-of-the-art factories in China, which transferred all VHS VCRs production out from Japan. By 1997, Funai became the first manufacturer to sell a new VHS VCR below $100 for the North American Market, while the Philips Magnavox brand they produced for was the best-seller. Quickly, Tetsuro Funai, the founder, became Japan's first US dollar billionaire electronic CEO. Later, the DVD technology was formed, and by 2001, Funai sold its first DVD player for less than $100. By then, Funai's U.S. subsidiary had relocated to Torrance, California. Today, Funai is one of the world's largest producers of DVD players, and is now one of the major suppliers of electronics to Wal-Mart on Black Friday.

In 2008, CEO and founder Tetsuro Funai retired and stepped down from CEO to become chairman. Philips signed a seven-year contract with Funai to license, sell, and distribute Philips- and Magnavox-branded televisions in North America.[3] In 2013, Funai acquired the option to buy the rest of Philips' consumer electronics operations and a license to globally market Philips branded consumer electronics.[4] But that purchase was terminated by Philips because of what Philips saw as breach of contract.[5]

Lexmark[edit]

Funai has made inkjet hardware for Lexmark International, Inc since 1997.[6] In August 2012, Lexmark announced that it would be ceasing production of its inkjet printer line.[7][8] In April 2013, Funai announced that it had signed an agreement to acquire Lexmark's inkjet-related technology and assets for approximately $100 million (approximately ¥ 9.5 billion).[6]

Funai acquired more than 1,500 inkjet patents, Lexmark's inkjet-related research and development assets and tools, all outstanding shares and the manufacturing facility of Lexmark International (Philippines), Inc., and other inkjet-related technologies and assets. Through this transaction, Funai acquired the capabilities to develop, manufacture and sell inkjet hardware as well as inkjet supplies.[9]

VHS videotape[edit]

A Sanyo-branded VHS tape

The decline of VHS videotape began with the introduction to market of the DVD format in 1997.[10] Funai continued to manufacture VHS tape recorders into the early part of 21st century, mostly under the Sanyo brand in China and North America. In July 2016, Funai ceased production of VHS equipment, the last known company in the world to do so, after poor sales of its last VCR/DVD player combos.[11]

See also[edit]

  • TP Vision acquired Philips branded TVs in some countries.

References[edit]

  1. ^'Funai Electric Co., Ltd. Lowers Consolidated Full-year Outlook for FY 2012'. Reuters. Archived from the original on May 3, 2012.
  2. ^'Our Brands'. 10 November 2016. Archived from the original on 10 November 2016.
  3. ^Lawler, Richard (April 8, 2008). 'Philips handing over North American TV manufacturing to Funai'. engadget. Retrieved September 5, 2010.
  4. ^'Notice of Acquisition of Lifestyle Entertainment Businesses of PHILIPS'(html) (Press release). Funai Electric Co., Ltd. January 29, 2013. Retrieved September 21, 2013.
  5. ^'Philips to take legal action against Funai'. 25 October 2013. Retrieved 23 July 2016.
  6. ^ ab'Funai acquiring Lexmark'sinkjet‐related technology and assets'(PDF). Press Information (Press release). funaiworld.com. April 2, 2013. p. 1. Retrieved September 21, 2013.
  7. ^'Lexmark announces restructuring'. Lexmark. August 28, 2012. Retrieved August 28, 2012.
  8. ^'Lexmark to exit inkjet printer market'. pcpro.co.uk. August 28, 2012. Retrieved August 28, 2012.
  9. ^'Funai acquiring Lexmark's inkjet-related technology and assets'. Newsroom.lexmark.com. April 1, 2013. Retrieved September 21, 2013.
  10. ^Chaney, Jen (28 August 2005). 'Parting Words For VHS Tapes, Soon to Be Gone With the Rewind'. The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 18 October 2005. Retrieved 22 May 2017.
  11. ^Walton, Mark (21 July 2016). 'Last known VCR maker stops production, 40 years after VHS format launch'. Ars Technica. Archived from the original on 22 May 2017. Retrieved 22 May 2017.

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External links[edit]

  • Official website(in Japanese)
  • Official website(in English)

Funai Tv Model F20lcte

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Funai&oldid=919026732'