HP L5015tm User Guide - Page 19

Power, Touch, Video

Page 19 highlights

Power To turn the monitor on or off, press the monitor power button once. The Power Status LED on the bottom of the monitor functions according to the following table. Monitor status OFF SLEEP ON LED status OFF PULSING ON The system consumes low power when in SLEEP and OFF modes. Touching the screen will bring the attached host PC out of SLEEP mode (similar to moving the mouse or pressing a keyboard key). To improve reliability and reduce wasteful power consumption, disconnect the power adapter when long periods of disuse are planned. Touch Your monitor is factory-calibrated and should not need manual calibration (unless the input video is not fully scaled to the native resolution, or the touch experience needs to be calibrated to a specific user). The touch function is not active until the USB cable is connected to the PC. Video A display's native resolution is its width and height measured in number of pixels. Generally, for best performance, an image displayed on this monitor will look best when your computer's output resolution matches this monitor's native resolution, which is 1024 x 768. For computer output resolutions at non-native resolutions, the monitor will scale the video to its panel's native resolution. This involves stretching or compressing the input image as needed in the X- and Ydimensions to fit the display's native resolution. An unavoidable byproduct of the scaling algorithms is a loss of fidelity when the computer's output video image is scaled by the monitor to fit the display. This loss of fidelity is most apparent when viewing feature-rich images at close distances (for example images containing small-font text). Your monitor will likely not require video adjustments. However, for analog VGA video, variations in video graphic card outputs may require user adjustments through the OSD to optimize the quality of the monitor's displayed image. These adjustments are "remembered" by the monitor. Also, to reduce the need for adjustments for different video mode timings, the monitor correctly scales and displays some of the video industry's most common video timing modes. Power 13

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
  • 14
  • 15
  • 16
  • 17
  • 18
  • 19
  • 20
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
  • 24
  • 25
  • 26
  • 27
  • 28
  • 29

Power
To turn the monitor on or off, press the monitor power button once.
The Power Status LED on the bottom of the monitor functions according to the following table.
Monitor status
LED status
OFF
OFF
SLEEP
PULSING
ON
ON
The system consumes low power when in SLEEP and OFF modes.
Touching the screen will bring the attached host PC out of SLEEP mode (similar to moving the mouse or
pressing a keyboard key).
To improve reliability and reduce wasteful power consumption, disconnect the power adapter when long
periods of disuse are planned.
Touch
Your monitor is factory-calibrated and should not need manual calibration (unless the input video is not fully
scaled to the native resolution, or the touch experience needs to be calibrated to a specific user).
The touch function is not active until the USB cable is connected to the PC.
Video
A display’s native resolution is its width and height measured in number of pixels. Generally, for best
performance, an image displayed on this monitor will look best when your computer’s output resolution
matches this monitor’s native resolution, which is 1024 x 768.
For computer output resolutions at non-native resolutions, the monitor will scale the video to its panel’s
native resolution. This involves stretching or compressing the input image as needed in the X- and Y-
dimensions to fit the display’s native resolution. An unavoidable byproduct of the scaling algorithms is a loss
of fidelity when the computer’s output video image is scaled by the monitor to fit the display. This loss of
fidelity is most apparent when viewing feature-rich images at close distances (for example images
containing small-font text).
Your monitor will likely not require video adjustments. However, for analog VGA video, variations in video
graphic card outputs may require user adjustments through the OSD to optimize the quality of the monitor’s
displayed image. These adjustments are “remembered” by the monitor. Also, to reduce the need for
adjustments for different video mode timings, the monitor correctly scales and displays some of the video
industry’s most common video timing modes.
Power
13