Using the controls on this page, you can
Change the color setting, reduce screen flickering, adjust the amount of information appearing on your display.
Change the high-definition format for an HDTV or set the country-specific signal for a standard-definition TV.
Resolution: Use this control to set the screen resolution for the selected display. As you increase the screen resolution value, you display more information on your screen, but the information decreases in size. The current setting is displayed below the slider.
Refresh rate: Use this list to set the refresh rates for the currently selected display. A higher refresh frequency reduces flicker on your screen.
Color depth: Use this list to set your color quality for the selected display. Increasing color quality lets you view more photo-realistic images and is recommended for most desktop publishing and graphics illustration applications.
Note: If you need to set your color quality to 256 colors to run a game or other software program that requires it, right-click the program icon or name on your desktop or Start menu, then click Properties. Click the Compatibility tab and then select the Run in 256 colors check box. Your display will revert to your default color setting when you close the program.
Connector: This indicates the connector that the GPU sees for the selected display.
LVDS - laptop display applies to a notebook display.
VGA applies to an analog PC display.
S-Video - standard definition television applies to a standard definition television display connected using an S-Video connection.
Composite - standard definition television applies to a standard definition television display connected using a composite connection.
Auto-select applies to TVs connected to the S-Video or composite connector, and causes the driver to attempt to automatically detect which one is used. For best results, manually select the connection that matches your setup. This option may not be available, depending on driver version and hardware support.
Component applies to an HDTV with a component connector.
DVI applies to a digital non-HD PC display.
HDMI - HDTV applies to an HDTV with an HDMI connector.
DisplayPort - HDTV applies to an HDTV with a DisplayPort connector.
TV format: If you are using a standard television and have chosen Composite or S-Video as your connector, this lists the signal formats based on country location.
Customize: Click to open the Customize dialog box that allows you to apply additional resolutions to your display. This is useful if your display requires a resolution that Windows does not offer.
Output color format: This setting appears only when HDTVs are connected though HDMI or DisplayPort connections, and lets you choose the color space that looks best on your TV.
Output dynamic range: You can select the dynamic range (16 to 235 or 0-255) of the RGB color format on HDMI and DisplayPort displays. If supported by the display, the full RGB range (0-255) preserves black detail and white peaks based on the game and application you are running.