I went through that long extensive live and no help. I know this has to be a simple fix, I just can't figure it out.
That would be great, how did you make that magic happen? The only thing I was able to do is set up a chat appointment for Mar. 2. So per haps you have a contact number? This is a super monitor, but so far customer service is crap.
I'm not sure? I am guessing that it is. When I turn my computer back on in the morning it goes to HDMI, when I turned it off it was in Sub-D. I must change it back to Sub-D every morning.
GWBELL345 wrote:
I have an SW2700. It set up easily to HDMI. On mine, in the lower right at the base of the screen and to the left of the power on button, are four "dot" symbols. Pressing the button underneath the fourth dot to the left of the power button brings up a small menu screen. Depressing the same button a second time displays the input options. Scroll to the HDMI input using the ˄ and ˅ symbols, then depress the button under the check mark. Hope this helps.
I have been setting and resetting using those buttons for nearly you weeks; I really thought this would be an easy. Its a minor frustration.
After hearing endorsements for BenQ monitors by so many here at UHH, I decided to up-grade to one. I'm having a simple problem that should be easy to fix and I need help. My old 24" AOC was not HDMI compatible, Part of the reason for my up-grade to a BenQ 27". After setting up the new BenQ, connecting to HDMI; none of my desk top icons appear and the task bark will not respond. If I switch over to the old Sub-D connection it works fine just like the old monitor. What do I need to do to get the HDMI connection to work. I tried to contact BenQ but can't do anything until a week from today for my "chat appointment" I must have spent nearly 2 hours just on their SUPPORT web-site. Do any of you BenQ owners know what simple fix is needed to make the HDMI connection work? I have a fairly new Lenovo desktop with 16 gigs of RAM with a SSHD. Thanks.
I took our first dog to obedience school and there we learned that a dog will learn their name faster using the ee sound ending the name. So we had; Holley (Christmas dog), Penny ( these are all Golden retreivers) then Honey, Lucy and Abby. Our newest pup is Maddie. All our dogs learned their masters' names: Cindy and Dave. Our children's names were also known. You could say "go see Cindy or Bizzy and they always would respond.
I like modern westerns. I stubbled a crossed this one and I too thought it was a fine movie.
Terrific arial shots! I am puzzled as to what the narrow green courts are for? There are 8 in the lower right side of the last photo? Could they be lawn bowling greens?
Terrific arial shots! I am puzzled as to what the narrow green courts are for? There are 8 in the lower right side of the last photo?
jerryc41 wrote:
With snow on the ground, we see tracks of creatures living among us. The picture below was posted online, with the poster asking what made the tracks. He got some amusing answers.
Snow snake
Drunken chipmunk
Rodent running from a snow snake
Leprechaun
Leprechaun trying to catch a snow snake
Drunken mouse
A mouse and its family
The general consensus is that it was a mouse or a vole - not funny, but probably correct.
If it was yellow, I have the answer.
Our dog's name is Maddie, we adopted her in July at 8 weeks old. She is a very quick study; learned her name quickly, knows her owner's names; Cindy and Dave. She has quite a vocabulary; knows NO, stop, in, out, potty, she knows the difference of ball, frisbee, or toy. Of course there is sit, stay, down, treat, bed time and heal. She is turning in to a really good dog, more so than we ever expected.
gwilliams6 wrote:
It seems the A1 can take a beating :
Sony A1 camera that tumbled down Olympic Ski slope, survived, What do you think of this?
Only lens hood and rear lcd screen replaced, camera finished taking photos, and was back on the slopes after Sony Pro Services replaced the hood and rear LCD screen. I guess all those news services that switched to Sony knew how tough a camera they were handing over to their staff photographers, worldwide.
https://petapixel.com/.../the-sony-camera-that.../...
It seems the A1 can take a beating : br br Sony ... (
show quote)
Today's world class skiers are skiing on ice, not snow that most recreational skiers know. They actually spray water on these courses. That's probably why the camera seemed like it would never stop. So, in my opinion the camera took a real licking and kept on CLICKING. I think I would compare it to rolling down a steep asphalt driveway. That camera looked like it rolled nearly a half mile?
Chuckle, chuckle, chuckle!!
Bigfoot must have the same affect!!