Re: Developer Transition Kit: DVI-VGA adapter cable? Non-Apple monitors?
Re: Developer Transition Kit: DVI-VGA adapter cable? Non-Apple monitors?
- Subject: Re: Developer Transition Kit: DVI-VGA adapter cable? Non-Apple monitors?
- From: Eider Oliveira <email@hidden>
- Date: Tue, 2 Aug 2005 15:54:25 -0300
Not really... the DVI output of PowerBook is DVI-I and the DTK is
DVI-D. The DVI-I interface contains both digital and analog signal.
The DVI-D contains only the digital signal.
You have to buy a compatible monitor, which means a LCD monitor with a
Digital Input.
On 8/2/05, Dan Smith <email@hidden> wrote:
> I, too, told my management that the Developer Transition Kit would cost only
> $1000, and did not notice that it will not work with an ordinary monitor. Does
> anyone know what the options are?
>
> --will the $19 Apple DVI to VGA Display Adapter, part number M8754G/A, work
> with the Developer Transition Kit hardware and allow a regular VGA
> analog-signal monitor to be used with it? (If not, why not?)
>
> Description says:
>
> The Apple DVI to VGA display adapter was specially designed to allow users to
> connect their DVI equipped Mac mini, PowerBook G4, or Power Mac to an external
> VGA monitor or projector for 24-bit video-mirroring or dual display. The DVI to
> VGA adapter plugs into the DVI port built into the new Mac mini, a PowerBook G4
> or into Power Mac with NVIDIA or ATI Radeon graphic cards which feature DVI
> ports.
>
> --Can I use a moderately-priced 17" display like an HP L1740, which costs about
> $360 and has "connector type: 24-pin Digital DVI; Interface (Output) DVI-D?"
>
> --Or am I forced to break the news to management that I need Apple's no doubt
> worthy but pricey $800 20" Cinema and that what I told them was a $1000
> purchase is actually going to end up costing nearly twice what I told them?
> (Yeah, yeah, yeah, I know... the power savings will pay for itself eventually
> etc).
>
> (Actually... hmmm... the specs say it consumes 65 watts while operating, 3
> watts in energy saver mode... the CRT I'm using now consumes 120W operating, 3
> watts in "active-off" mode... assume it's "operating" 2000 hours per year...
> the Apple will save 55 watts = 110 kilowatt-hours per year at $0.15 per kwh =
> $16.50 per year... yeah, right, it will pay for itself in just forty-eight
> short years).
>
>
>
>
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--
Eider Oliveira - ICQ - 26992792
"Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place.
Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are,
by definition, not smart enough to debug it." - Brian W. Kernighan
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