I forgot something: with one of the Macs came another "adaptor". This
one had two Mac monitor ports, one male, one female. No dip switches. On one
side it´s writen "Supermac", on the other it has some kind of part number
and "832x624". What´s it supposed to do? Turn a monitor into a 832x624 one
Hi Bill,
Thank you for your answer.
I don't think the problem is sync-on-green. A quick research on Google
left me with the impression that sync-on-green is more of a problem on the
monitor side. I'm pretty sure none of my monitors use it. Perhaps another
sync problem, but not s-o-g.
Hi Kris,
Thank you for your answer. Is there a way to overrule the sense pins
information via software? If so, I could use Basilisk to produce a boot disk
with the apropriated extension (or whatever) and see if a can force the Mac
into a VGA friendly resolution/frequency.
- Original
Every 68k Mac with internal video since the LC (except the IIsi) supports
extended sense codes, which includes a profile for VGA, which is
[EMAIL PROTECTED] The closest resolution used by Apple was [EMAIL PROTECTED] I
believe only Composite sync was used on internal video. If you use a nubus
vi
> Hi,
>
> I recently received three 68k Macs (IIvx, Centris 650 and Quadra
610).
> Unfortunatly I dont have any Mac monitor. A friend of mine got me this
[...]
>
> The adapter is aparently made by Samsung. It has lots of dip switchs
> built on it to select the resolucion (I believe I tr
You might download "Multi-Resolution" and give it a try. (shareware)
www.softronmedia.com
charles lenington
"Humberto B. Morais" wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I recently received three 68k Macs (IIvx, Centris 650 and Quadra 610).
> Unfortunatly I don´t have any Mac monitor. A friend of mine got m