Connecting two monitors when only one VGA port
I have a computer with only one VGA port. I have connected one monitor to the VGA port. I want to connect another monitor to the computer. The computer doesn't have any other graphics outputs.
What I need to install in the computer to attach a second monitor?
Do I need to buy new graphics card? Or can I get DVI or Displayport card?
Solution 1:
Ignoreing all the terminology:
You only have one graphic output atm, with an analog signal and a DB15 connector.
You want to connect multiple monitors.
There are two ways to do that:
- Add a graphics card with more outputs. For non gaming purposes a cheap (€80-ish) card with 2 or 3 outputs will do just fine, and you can use both these and the current DB15/VGA connector.
- Split the output from your current DB15/VGA over multiple screens.
The last will mean you have the same image on both screens. Might be useful in a classroom with one image on the screen and an other on a projector.
The first option seems much more sensible. Adding more graphics outputs can be done with PCI-e cards (simple, works at boot, usually provides modern outputs which means you can use a modern monitor). If at all possible I would go for a second monitor with display port and a cheap card with a pair of display port outs.
Note that even one DP out can be used to chain to multiple monitors as long as all use DP 1.2 and MST.
A more portable solution is an USB based external card. This sounds great, but performace is much lower and the sole experience I have with that (one USB card on two laptops) is awful. Graphical artifacts, no screen updating if you rotate it 90 degrees, blue screens, etc etc. That might be just bad luck with a USB32HDEH but it makes me reluctant to advice this route.
Solution 2:
Okay so you have a few options, if you have another video out point like a DVI or HDMI you can connect a monitor using that, if you dont have any left then you can either go out and by a USB to VGA connector which displays the second screen. beware that using this is very slow and can be jittery if you dont buy a high quality converter. You can also go out an buy another graphics card which will be more stable and secure than using a converter.
Solution 3:
A second graphics card or if you don't mind the same thing on both screens, then a VGA splitter.
I want to bring up an important point that others have missed regarding your use of the term CPU.
In old textbooks, the term CPU did indeed refer to the box.
But it's a bit of an ambiguous term, because since then people have used the term to mean processor, and that's a more common usage. And most people aren't aware of the old usage of CPU to mean the box.
So you could just call the thing you're calling a CPU, a/the box.(e.g. the case + what's in it). e.g. people refer to windows boxes. And call a processor a processor rather than a CPU.. That way you can avoid the term CPU entirely because it's ambiguous.. But know that when people use the term CPU, they usually mean processor and aren't aware of any other meaning of it.