Instale o Steam
iniciar sessão
|
idioma
简体中文 (Chinês simplificado)
繁體中文 (Chinês tradicional)
日本語 (Japonês)
한국어 (Coreano)
ไทย (Tailandês)
Български (Búlgaro)
Čeština (Tcheco)
Dansk (Dinamarquês)
Deutsch (Alemão)
English (Inglês)
Español-España (Espanhol — Espanha)
Español-Latinoamérica (Espanhol — América Latina)
Ελληνικά (Grego)
Français (Francês)
Italiano (Italiano)
Bahasa Indonesia (Indonésio)
Magyar (Húngaro)
Nederlands (Holandês)
Norsk (Norueguês)
Polski (Polonês)
Português (Portugal)
Română (Romeno)
Русский (Russo)
Suomi (Finlandês)
Svenska (Sueco)
Türkçe (Turco)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamita)
Українська (Ucraniano)
Relatar um problema com a tradução
If you would use a digital connection (DVI, HDMI, DP), then there is no need to "adjust" the picture, as it would get a signal that would properly fit the screen in all supported resolutions and refresh rates. Sometimes it may be off in a way that you may need to adjust your "Scaling" via your GPU software, but other than this, Digital Connection is the best means of using screens that support such connections.
Yes, but I currently do not have a DVI cable and I know many others do not as well. I just posted this because this stupid feature really got annoying.
If it is annoying, use a digital cable if the display and your GPU both support that.
Also for best possible alignment when using "Auto Adjust" on such screen is to bring up something that gives u a bright screen color; like a full screen website with an all white background (such as Google) or simply opening something such as "Computer" or "Windows Explorer" in your Windows OS and hitting F11 to make it entirely full-screen; then do your auto-screen-adjust. It's much harder for the screen to align properly when you are displaying something with mostly dark edges, such as a dark or black desktop wallpaper; thus bringing up something bright when u do this can help.