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- Ben
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Can you connect it with a HDMI cable? If you don't have a spare one lying around, borrow one from something else just to see if it gives you more options for resolution.
no input for it mate.Can you connect it with a HDMI cable? If you don't have a spare one lying around, borrow one from something else just to see if it gives you more options for resolution.
Can you connect it with a HDMI cable? If you don't have a spare one lying around, borrow one from something else just to see if it gives you more options for resolution.
no input for it mate.
Pc doesn't have one, is there a way of telling if the graphic card is working? or is it the on-board graphics? not very good with computers, I just get buy.Subject to visual/physical check I thought that model you mentioned had DVI port ~ but I am repeating myself
Pc doesn't have one, is there a way of telling if the graphic card is working? or is it the on-board graphics? not very good with computers, I just get buy.
Dvi is not the same has HDMI
Strange thinking!monitor size and printer size can be completly different , one way is to set your disply to the printer , it might look wierd but it will give a better impression of what you are going to get
Absolutely!This has nothing whatsoever to do with screen resolution, it is simply a setting within either the print preferences, the printer driver or the PS print dialogue that is forcing the print to fit certain dimensions thus distorting the output.
Distortion of the screen image due to an incorrect screen resolution will not make one iota of difference to the image file that is being rasterised for printing....
I'd like to drive to Oxford this evening, but I don't want to use the gears or the steering wheel. Can you help me?Strange that someone might want to print, but not to engage with the settings to do so!
are you taking the p***..I'd like to drive to Oxford this evening, but I don't want to use the gears or the steering wheel. Can you help me?
Colour management is why, how else can you let Photoshop manage the colour profiles?Why print from Photoshop? would be my first question.
First thing to do is rule out screen res/geometry... Photograph a circle, any circle as long as it is a circle not an oval, make sure that the sensor is parallel to your circle so that it is a circle on the image... open this image on your computer, if it is an oval on screen then your resolution/geometry is out. If it displays as a circle then you are going to have to dive into your printer settings.
I don't think it is necessarily safe to generalise. I think we can agree that if some software has a "shrink to fit" feature then it *should* by default shrink both dimensions by the same proportion. But for any given software installation, who can say for sure (1) whether or not that is in fact what it does by default; (2) whether or not it has any configuration options to allow it to behave differently; and (3) what options the user may have enabled, by intent or otherwise?But other than what I said about above about constraining one ratio into the space of another ratio, though I have never seen it in a photograph it makes me think of when I print a pdf document and click the box in the print interface "shrink to fit" . Again this is in effect constraining one file into the space available but with an action selected to do it and usually AFAIK keeps the original ratio?
re this size have you measured it and seen how it differs to the size here 22.21 x 14.55 cm?