tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5836189618754059002.post7110847648242737702..comments2023-10-29T00:16:06.437-07:00Comments on Digital Catharsis: DVI, VGA, oh my!Andy Harbickhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01207294937045717563noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5836189618754059002.post-8675674013416778392005-11-07T07:59:23.000-08:002005-11-07T07:59:23.000-08:00Everyone above is exactly right, so I have almost ...Everyone above is exactly right, so I have almost no value to add. DVI-D is the digital specification, and DVI-I is the mixed one. Most cards output DVI-D alone. Converting digital-to-analog is way easier than the other way, which is why it's so expensive to do that.<br>I also have solved the problem by using Remote Desktop Client, which is awesomely fast, and more than I need since I'm not gaming on my PC. I use it fullscreen almost all the time. Trick if you use the Apple keyboard: the clear key is your num lock.<br>Michael McDanielhttp://www.michaelmcdaniel.netnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5836189618754059002.post-89888350309747741802005-11-05T13:46:25.000-08:002005-11-05T13:46:25.000-08:00Marcel, nice to hear from you and thanks for the i...Marcel, nice to hear from you and thanks for the idea!<br>I downloaded and tried it, and it's a lot faster than VNC (I tried Chicken of the VNC) but it's only showing 800x600 with 8-bit color depth. It also had serious problems on the first kid game I tried (which I doubt is using advanced "hardware features"). Is there some sort of configuration that I need to do on either the client or the server?<br>Andyhttp://blog.aharbick.comnoreply@blogger.com