-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Sunday 09 November 2003 18:42, Gordon Messmer wrote: > Mike A. Harris wrote: > > It is also possible to destroy LCD panels by providing incorrect > > video signal information. Even many modern LCDs can be destroyed > > in this manner if programmed incorrectly. If you ever configure > > an LCD and see bright white "blooming" on the display, power it > > off immediately. > > Interesting. For reference, where will this "blooming" appear? As I understand it the 'blooming' merely means that the LCD transistors are no longer being driven. FYI I see this whenever my LCD is powered off by DPMS, it turns off the backlight first, but if I hold my LCD at the right angle to the ambient light I see the decay of the charge that held the LCD pixels at a particular colour over the next few seconds. It is not harmful, and I don't believe whatever failure mode the old CRT monitors suffered from exists any more in an LCD monitor. I'm also of a mind that the "your CRT will blow up if incorrectly driven" thing is more urban myth than fact, although I'm sure there are pathological cases in ancient history. If anyone has any direct experience with trouble from "overclocking" your CRT or LCD monitor it'd be interesting to hear it. - -Andy -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.2 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQE/rpKJjKeDCxMJCTIRAhOCAJ9MZE2zzf3yRxJ5CSN510/IH1jNvgCePEcD dvGx/dP3bYiQsoUC2Co+Ihg= =LIHS -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----