Is there any Acer H5360 users that are capable of getting their monitor.inf file plus their EDID information into a file and send it to me.
Both will only be really small in size.
[b]Step 2: Open the Phoenix EDID Designer. Go to the ‘Tools’ menu, then select ‘Extract Registry EDID…’ Find the “Hardware ID†in the list that matches the one in Monitor Asset Manager and extract that bad boy.
[/b]
After this step can you just save it for me as a .dat like the example, I don't want the next steps where you start playing with EDID extensions.
I'm trying to get a clean extract is why.
I'm working on something but don't know if it will work but really need this and would appreciate it.
Please reply if you can get this.
Thanks
Step 2: Open the Phoenix EDID Designer. Go to the ‘Tools’ menu, then select ‘Extract Registry EDID…’ Find the “Hardware ID†in the list that matches the one in Monitor Asset Manager and extract that bad boy.
After this step can you just save it for me as a .dat like the example, I don't want the next steps where you start playing with EDID extensions.
I'm trying to get a clean extract is why.
I'm working on something but don't know if it will work but really need this and would appreciate it.
Is there any Acer H5360 users that are capable of getting their monitor.inf file plus their EDID information into a file and send it to me.
Both will only be really small in size.
[b]Step 2: Open the Phoenix EDID Designer. Go to the ‘Tools’ menu, then select ‘Extract Registry EDID…’ Find the “Hardware ID†in the list that matches the one in Monitor Asset Manager and extract that bad boy.
[/b]
After this step can you just save it for me as a .dat like the example, I don't want the next steps where you start playing with EDID extensions.
I'm trying to get a clean extract is why.
I'm working on something but don't know if it will work but really need this and would appreciate it.
Please reply if you can get this.
Thanks
Step 2: Open the Phoenix EDID Designer. Go to the ‘Tools’ menu, then select ‘Extract Registry EDID…’ Find the “Hardware ID†in the list that matches the one in Monitor Asset Manager and extract that bad boy.
After this step can you just save it for me as a .dat like the example, I don't want the next steps where you start playing with EDID extensions.
I'm trying to get a clean extract is why.
I'm working on something but don't know if it will work but really need this and would appreciate it.
Both will only be really small in size.
[url="http://currysauce.org/2010/03/20/how-to-disable-sound-output-over-hdmi-for-nvidia-graphics-cards/"]http://currysauce.org/2010/03/20/how-to-di...graphics-cards/[/url]
Above is a tutorial on how to do it.
[b]Step 2: Open the Phoenix EDID Designer. Go to the ‘Tools’ menu, then select ‘Extract Registry EDID…’ Find the “Hardware ID†in the list that matches the one in Monitor Asset Manager and extract that bad boy.
[/b]
After this step can you just save it for me as a .dat like the example, I don't want the next steps where you start playing with EDID extensions.
I'm trying to get a clean extract is why.
I'm working on something but don't know if it will work but really need this and would appreciate it.
Please reply if you can get this.
Thanks
Both will only be really small in size.
http://currysauce.org/2010/03/20/how-to-di...graphics-cards/
Above is a tutorial on how to do it.
Step 2: Open the Phoenix EDID Designer. Go to the ‘Tools’ menu, then select ‘Extract Registry EDID…’ Find the “Hardware ID†in the list that matches the one in Monitor Asset Manager and extract that bad boy.
After this step can you just save it for me as a .dat like the example, I don't want the next steps where you start playing with EDID extensions.
I'm trying to get a clean extract is why.
I'm working on something but don't know if it will work but really need this and would appreciate it.
Please reply if you can get this.
Thanks
Both will only be really small in size.
[url="http://currysauce.org/2010/03/20/how-to-disable-sound-output-over-hdmi-for-nvidia-graphics-cards/"]http://currysauce.org/2010/03/20/how-to-di...graphics-cards/[/url]
Above is a tutorial on how to do it.
[b]Step 2: Open the Phoenix EDID Designer. Go to the ‘Tools’ menu, then select ‘Extract Registry EDID…’ Find the “Hardware ID†in the list that matches the one in Monitor Asset Manager and extract that bad boy.
[/b]
After this step can you just save it for me as a .dat like the example, I don't want the next steps where you start playing with EDID extensions.
I'm trying to get a clean extract is why.
I'm working on something but don't know if it will work but really need this and would appreciate it.
Please reply if you can get this.
Thanks
Both will only be really small in size.
http://currysauce.org/2010/03/20/how-to-di...graphics-cards/
Above is a tutorial on how to do it.
Step 2: Open the Phoenix EDID Designer. Go to the ‘Tools’ menu, then select ‘Extract Registry EDID…’ Find the “Hardware ID†in the list that matches the one in Monitor Asset Manager and extract that bad boy.
After this step can you just save it for me as a .dat like the example, I don't want the next steps where you start playing with EDID extensions.
I'm trying to get a clean extract is why.
I'm working on something but don't know if it will work but really need this and would appreciate it.
Please reply if you can get this.
Thanks