![]() Once you've verified that you have enough surface area on your wall that you'll be projecting onto, make sure you have enough distance away from it to place the projector. Keep in mind that screens can be rather expensive. If you want this to look halfway decent with your home decor, projection screens can be purchased online and at office supply stores. At Dollar General these sheets go for 3 for $1 I believe, so for probably $4 or so (9 sheets plus $1 for scotch tape of course) you can make an inexpensive screen. However, if you need to make one, head down to the local crafts store and purchase some large sheets of white poster board and make a screen out of these. I was lucky enough to have plain white walls in my room, so creating a screen was not an issue for me. I assure you that they just don’t do any justice! ![]() If your walls are painted, covered in wallpaper, or textured, don't fret! Before we go any further, let me apologize in advance for the low quality of the pictures. Keep in mind that you will need a white wall to project your movies/games/TV/internet surfing onto. What next? Well, first off you need to make sure you'll have ample space for it. OK, so you've got the desire and the money to have a projector. There are a few main steps that will be discussed in this guide. This is the same idea, only with higher quality LCDs that support VGA input. Many people have seen these in math classes used with a teacher’s graphic calculator. ![]() Before LCD projectors were being manufactured many major presentation-based companies (3m, dukane, infocus, nView, etc) created LCD panels to sit on top of a standard overhead projector. The niche I am referring to is in a technology called Projection Panels. I decided to look further into projectors and found a very interesting niche in the technology that lets you build (don't get scared! There are no tools involved!) a quality projector for under $200. If you're anything like me, you probably thought of the gaming possibilities of the projector instead of it being used for boring PowerPoint presentations. Maybe it was at a business meeting, or maybe it was during a high school or college class. I hope this bit of info is helpful to others, this software should have always been available to Geforce users as it used to be.There's no doubt that most people looking at this have come across a video projector before. This worked on Windows 7 圆4 with a Geforce GTX480 and Forceware 260.99. If you go to your control panel, you will now see the nView applet in there and you can enable and configure it to your desired settings. Run the shortcut, and low and behold, nView now installs with no problems. This seemed likely to be a force install switch to me so I tried it.Ĭreate a shortcut in the nView folder that has in the target field without the. This first line of arg value was followed by "-f". In this block of text there were three lines called arg value. This file was text based and contained a number of strings with the software install rejection message in various languages.Īnyway, down the bottom of this file I noticed a block called. Looking a little further I noticed that there was a small file called NView.nvi in the folder with the setup executable. Running the setup in this folder however presented me with a message indicating that the software would not install due to me not having compatible hardware. Looking at the installation folders for the 260.99 WHQL drivers, I noticed that there was a folder with an nView installer. ![]() After searching the internet and this forum, the only option I could find, was to install the nView package from pre 197.00 version drivers. It can be quite useful for people with more than one monitor. I was disappointed when Nvidia decided to prevent Geforce users from installing the nView desktop management software on their PCs since quite a while ago.
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