With two monitors, you can view a spreadsheet and write a report without constant minimising and maximising. Editing photos? Keep your tools on the secondary screen so that you can better view your image. Troubleshooting a software problem? Keep the instructions on one screen while performing the steps on the other. Finally, stretch that wide spreadsheet across two monitors for a bird's-eye view of all the numbers. Just find your spare monitor (or some spare cash) and some extra desk space, and we'll show you how to start seeing double.
Estimated time required: 2 hours.
Estimated cost: AU$700 and up.
- Second monitor
- AGP or PCI video card (if your PC doesn't have an extra video port)
- DVI-to-VGA adapter (for monitors without DVI ports)
![]() | A dual-monitor system lets you move objects, such as Adobe Photoshop palettes and toolbars, off the primary screen. |
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Step 3: Ensure you
have two graphics ports
If your graphics card has two outputs -- the older analog port
and the newer Digital Visual Interface (DVI) port -- all you have
to do to connect a second monitor is plug it into the available
port. Newer LCD monitors probably have a DVI port, and that's the
one you should make the primary monitor because the picture will
be better.
![]() | An AGP slot is usually identified by its brown colour; the PCI slots behind it are white. |
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If you don't have a graphics card and are relying on integrated graphics instead, you'll need a standalone graphics card. If that's the case, you should look for one with two outputs, because when you plug in the new card, the integrated output is usually disabled. Some newer PCs have the faster PCI Express (PCIe) card slots; the x16 slot is for your graphics card. If you're buying a card for this slot, make sure it's a PCIe card.
Step 4: Connect the
second monitor
![]() | This PC has integrated graphics (A), a dual-output graphics card (B), and a single-output PCI card (C). The blue outputs are analog, and the white rectangular port (D) is DVI. |
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As a quick recap, analog connectors have three staggered rows of five pins each, while digital connectors have three uniform rows of eight pins each, with an additional four-pin-plus-blade connector arranged in a square.
![]() | To activate the secondary monitor, right-click within the "2" rectangle and check Attached. Then configure the display properties as desired. |
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Now set the resolution and colour quality as desired and check the box labeled "Extend my Windows desktop onto this monitor." Then drag the monitor 2 rectangle so that the positions of the two rectangles in the dialog box match the physical positions of the two monitors. You can place monitor 2 above, below, or on either side of monitor 1, and with the virtual and physical positions in agreement, you can drag the mouse from one monitor to the other, just as if the two monitors were one large screen.
Before you quit the Display Properties dialog box, click the Identify button to display a large number on each monitor, which should agree with the number placement seen in the dialog box.
![]() | This dialog indicates that the secondary monitor is to the left of the primary monitor. Its presence adds 1,024 pixels of horizontal space, and its top is 224 pixels lower than the primary monitor's. |
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You may see a few quirks, however. As you make various configuration changes, be prepared for Windows XP to rearrange the icons on your desktop, probably lining all of them along the left side of the primary monitor screen. You'll just have to put up with this positioning and relocate them as desired once you're done.
If a browser running on the secondary monitor opens a new window, that window may show up on the primary monitor. Or if the new window is supposed to appear at a specified location, it may instead butt against the side that's closest to the primary monitor.
If the secondary monitor is smaller than the primary monitor, the title bar of a window may be off the top of the screen, making its menu bar and other items inaccessible. If so, just drag the side of the window nearest the primary monitor back over to that monitor, thus exposing part of the title bar, which you can now drag as needed. If this is a recurring problem, go back to the Display Properties dialog box, select the Settings tab, and drag the top of monitor 2 up to align it with the top of monitor 1.
Once you've worked out any kinks, you'll quickly appreciate the benefits of a dual-monitor setup and wonder how you ever survived with only one screen.