Calling all you TFT monitor owners - 04/03/05 06:18 PM
Hi, now here's something to investigate, especially those of you with TFT monitors and running Windows 2000. Have a close look at the Taskbar at the bottom of the screen. Okay, if you haven't configured Windows to make the Taskbar disappear when you're not using it, do so, by putting the mousepointer into the Taskbar, right-clicking, selecting Properties and then checking Auto Hide.
Now, when you allow the Taskbar to disappear, does it in fact TOTALLY disappear, or do you still see about half-a-millimetre of it (ie. the top edge of it)? I've recently invested in a new TFT monitor and that's precisely what I see, whereas with my old CRT monitor, I could of course adjust the 'raster' to make it completely disappear when I wanted. But TFT 'rasters' are supposed to be fixed and super-accurate and certainly the display test suite that I've run has returned 100% results for the display's geometry. And yet I see that half-a-millimetre of the Taskbar.
So, perhaps Microsoft always intended that the very top edge of the Taskbar should still remain visible, when the Taskbar is meant to be hidden? Annoying, that.
Now, when you allow the Taskbar to disappear, does it in fact TOTALLY disappear, or do you still see about half-a-millimetre of it (ie. the top edge of it)? I've recently invested in a new TFT monitor and that's precisely what I see, whereas with my old CRT monitor, I could of course adjust the 'raster' to make it completely disappear when I wanted. But TFT 'rasters' are supposed to be fixed and super-accurate and certainly the display test suite that I've run has returned 100% results for the display's geometry. And yet I see that half-a-millimetre of the Taskbar.
So, perhaps Microsoft always intended that the very top edge of the Taskbar should still remain visible, when the Taskbar is meant to be hidden? Annoying, that.