bryanlacksfocus
Registered
Hi, my PowerBook has an s-video cable that has somehow gotten confused and tells my computer that there's a display hooked up through the s-video when there isn't and there isn't one when there is. I generally keep it hooked up to my TV when at home and when I want to watch something from my computer on the TV, I have to unplug the cable click Detect Displays and then re-plug it in. What is most annoying though is that there is no way to turn off the additional displays when I am using my laptop away from my TV (say, at work or a coffeeshop) and often the cursor and certain windows disappear off the screen.
I reformatted the drive and reinstalled the OS, hoping it might be software-related. I took it over to the Genius Bar, but their guess was that it is a hardware problem that would require replacing the video card. The PowerBook is a G4 15in. Aluminum 1.25GHz running Tiger.
I was wondering:
1. Has anyone ever heard of this happening?
2. Is there a way to fix it besides expensive hardware replacement?
3. Do you know of any quick-fixes e.g., third-party apps that allow you to turn on and off displays individually rather than have them be automatically detected, or even a dummy s-video plug that sends a signal to the computer that it is attached to a video display?
Thanks for any help!
Bryan Morrison
I reformatted the drive and reinstalled the OS, hoping it might be software-related. I took it over to the Genius Bar, but their guess was that it is a hardware problem that would require replacing the video card. The PowerBook is a G4 15in. Aluminum 1.25GHz running Tiger.
I was wondering:
1. Has anyone ever heard of this happening?
2. Is there a way to fix it besides expensive hardware replacement?
3. Do you know of any quick-fixes e.g., third-party apps that allow you to turn on and off displays individually rather than have them be automatically detected, or even a dummy s-video plug that sends a signal to the computer that it is attached to a video display?
Thanks for any help!
Bryan Morrison