F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Normal refers to a typical or standard state, condition, or value.

Normal refers to a typical or standard state, condition, or value.

Normal refers to a typical or standard state, condition, or value.

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Snowkiller953
Member
115
03-09-2016, 03:01 AM
#1
I set up and installed Windows 10 1809 before that, but updates, GPU and CPU drivers were needed before I could use the desktop. The screen was grainy and didn’t reach its full resolution. I had to download the NVIDIA driver myself. Could a bad CMOS battery be causing this problem?
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Snowkiller953
03-09-2016, 03:01 AM #1

I set up and installed Windows 10 1809 before that, but updates, GPU and CPU drivers were needed before I could use the desktop. The screen was grainy and didn’t reach its full resolution. I had to download the NVIDIA driver myself. Could a bad CMOS battery be causing this problem?

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Natriumi
Member
51
03-13-2016, 06:12 AM
#2
This might be a problem with the operating system. It could be related to identifying the GPU, display, and native resolution. If it can't determine these details, it won't handle it automatically. Simply install the driver and adjust the resolution manually. It's quite straightforward.
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Natriumi
03-13-2016, 06:12 AM #2

This might be a problem with the operating system. It could be related to identifying the GPU, display, and native resolution. If it can't determine these details, it won't handle it automatically. Simply install the driver and adjust the resolution manually. It's quite straightforward.

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alejandro351
Member
137
03-17-2016, 04:04 AM
#3
The problem seems to lie with one of these areas: monitor not sending accurate specifications to the graphics card (could be a bad monitor, faulty cable, or incorrect connection type like VGA/HDMI instead of DVI/DisplayPort). Graphics card itself isn't necessarily broken, but might need a design fix or firmware update. Windows only displays data it receives from the graphics card drivers.
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alejandro351
03-17-2016, 04:04 AM #3

The problem seems to lie with one of these areas: monitor not sending accurate specifications to the graphics card (could be a bad monitor, faulty cable, or incorrect connection type like VGA/HDMI instead of DVI/DisplayPort). Graphics card itself isn't necessarily broken, but might need a design fix or firmware update. Windows only displays data it receives from the graphics card drivers.

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freezy2004
Junior Member
23
03-18-2016, 05:02 AM
#4
You are connecting a high-quality DVI to DVI cable.
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freezy2004
03-18-2016, 05:02 AM #4

You are connecting a high-quality DVI to DVI cable.