ENGLISH Matrox Millennium G450 • G450 LE • G450 LX • G450 PCI • G450 DVI • G450 SH User Guide 10711-301-0215 2011.04.
Hardware installation This section describes how to install your Matrox card. For information specific to your computer, like how to remove its cover, see your system manual. WARNING: To avoid personal injury and to prevent damage to your computer or Matrox hardware, turn off your computer, unplug it, and then wait for it to cool before you install your Matrox product and touch any of the internal parts of your computer.
Choose an expansion slot Most computers have different types of expansion slots. Choose an AGP or PCI slot, depending on the type of Matrox card you have. Your system manual should identify the location of each type of expansion slot in your computer. (Back of computer) AGP slot PCI slot ISA slot WARNING: Inserting your Matrox card into the wrong type of slot could damage your card, your computer, or both. If you have an AGP card, don’t insert the plastic tab (see picture) into the slot.
Connection setup For the purpose of determining your connection setup, there are 4 types of graphics cards: HD-15/HD-15 – two HD-15 (blue) connectors HD-15 only – only an HD-15 (blue) connector DVI/HD-15 – a DVI (white) and an HD-15 (blue) connector DVI only – only a DVI (white) connector HD-15 HD-15 HD-15 DVI HD-15 DVI WARNING: Don’t change monitor connections while your computer is turned on.
Note: Cards with a single HD-15 connector can only support one analog monitor at a time. With these cards, DualHead features (see page 10) are unavailable. If your graphics card has a DVI connector and an HD-15 connector If your Matrox card has a HD-15 connector HD-15 connector DVI and an HD-15 connector, you can connect up to two monitors directly to your card. DVI connector You can use the HD-15 connector on your card to connect an analog monitor.
To use a dual-monitor cable to connect one or two analog monitors, connect it to your card and to your analog monitor cables. If you’re connecting only one monitor, use the main connector (labeled 1) of your dualmonitor cable. Dual-monitor cable Main connector (1) Secondary connector Note: To connect a digital monitor (a monitor that uses digital input, usually a flat panel monitor) to your Matrox product, your monitor must have a DVI connector.
Determining your main and secondary display Your Matrox hardware has a main display and a secondary display – the main display is more capable than the secondary display. Which connector the software uses for your main display depends on your connection setup. If your Matrox card has two HD-15 connectors or if you’re connecting your monitors using a dual-monitor cable, the connectors are numbered. The main display uses the connector labeled 1 and the secondary display uses the connector labeled 2.
Software installation This section describes how to install Matrox software for Windows 98/Me/2000 /XP or NT 4.0. (For other operating systems, see the Readme file in the root folder of the Matrox installation CD-ROM.) Windows 2000/XP or NT 4.0 – You may need administrator rights to install certain software. For more information, see Windows documentation. 1 Restart your computer If you’re using Windows 98/Me/2000/XP, it detects new hardware when you restart.
Display setup Windows 98/Me/2000/XP or NT 4.0 – Your Matrox display driver includes Matrox PowerDesk software. This software helps you get the most out of your Matrox graphics card. This section has important information on how to configure your display settings using Matrox PowerDesk software. Accessing PowerDesk property sheets Many display controls are on Matrox PowerDesk property sheets. You can identify Matrox PowerDesk property sheets by the icon appearing on the tab.
2 Depending on what version of Windows you have, click Change Display Type, or Advanced Properties Æ Monitor, or Advanced Æ Monitor. If you’re using a multi-display desktop, select a display before clicking Advanced. 3 If the monitor name listed doesn’t match your monitor, click the Change button to select a new monitor name. Follow the on-screen instructions. For more information on Windows monitor settings, see Windows documentation.
2 Select the DualHead Multi-Display option button. 3 Click OK Æ Yes to restart your computer and for changes to take effect. 4 Access the Matrox PowerDesk Settings property sheet (see “Accessing PowerDesk property sheets”, page 9). 5 Click Multi-Display Desktop ( 6 Move the Desktop area slider to adjust your multi-display desktop, then click OK to accept your changes. ). Note: In multi-display mode under Windows NT 4.0, the same display resolution and color palette is used for each display.
More PowerDesk information For more information on Matrox PowerDesk: Windows 98/Me/2000/XP or NT 4.0 – For context-sensitive help where available, click the “ ” icon in the title bar, then click the item you want help on. Right-click a help topic for a pop-up menu that lets you print or copy it. (Some help topics are only available through context-sensitive help.
Troubleshooting Basic procedures This section explains basic procedures that are referred to by some troubleshooting items in this guide. Restarting in safe mode or VGA mode What follows is information on how to restart your computer in safe mode (or VGA mode). If your primary display is usable: Windows 98/Me/2000/XP or NT 4.0 – 1 Restart your computer: Windows 98/Me/2000/XP – Click Start Æ Shut Down Æ Restart Æ OK. Windows NT 4.0 – Click Start Æ Shut Down Æ Restart your computer Æ Yes.
Windows NT 4.0 – 1 Press [Ctrl]+[Alt]+[Del] Æ [Tab] Æ [Tab] Æ [Enter] Æ [È] (down arrow) Æ [Enter] to restart your computer. 2 From the startup menu, choose Windows “VGA mode”. Main troubleshooting This section addresses possible problems that could prevent you from using your computer. Problem 1Cause 1Solution 2Cause Computer doesn’t display information or boot after Matrox card is installed Your Matrox card may not be properly installed. Make sure your Matrox card is properly installed.
4Cause 1Solution The BIOS of your Matrox graphics card may need to be updated or restored. For advanced users – If you have another VGA-compatible graphics card (ISA or PCI), you can try resetting the BIOS of your Matrox graphics card. 1 Turn off your computer and insert the other graphics card into an expansion slot. For more information on expansion slots, see “Choose an expansion slot”, page 3. 2 Plug your monitor into the other graphics card and restart your computer.
2Cause Your monitor may not be properly connected. 1Solution Make sure your monitor is properly connected to the correct connector on your Matrox graphics card (see “Connection setup”, page 4). 2Solution Make sure the monitor power cable is firmly in place. 3Solution Make sure the connection to the back of the monitor is firmly in place.
1Solution Windows 98/Me/2000/XP – 1 Windows 98/Me – If your primary display is unusable, restart your computer in safe mode (see “Restarting in safe mode or VGA mode”, page 13). Windows 2000/XP – If your primary display is unusable, restart your computer in VGA mode (see “Restarting in safe mode or VGA mode”, page 13). 2 Right-click the Windows desktop background, then click Properties Æ Settings.
2Cause 1Solution Files on your system may have been deleted or corrupted. Remove, then restore Matrox software: Note: Before removing software, make sure you have all the necessary files to reinstall software that may still be needed. Also, make sure the display driver you reinstall supports all Matrox products in your computer. Windows 98/Me/2000/XP or NT 4.0 – 1 If your primary display is unusable, restart your computer in safe mode or VGA mode (see “Restarting in safe mode or VGA mode”, page 13).
More information We provide additional documentation in help files, Readme files, and Adobe Acrobat PDF (Portable Document Format) files. To view or print PDF files, use the Acrobat Reader program, which you can install from the Matrox installation CD-ROM. This guide is available on the CD-ROM as a PDF file (Doc\English\Guide\Guide_en.pdf).
TV output If your Matrox graphics card has a second monitor connector, you can use the TV output adapter to connect a TV or video recorder to view or record the secondary display of your Matrox graphics card. If a TV output adapter wasn’t included with your Matrox product, you can purchase it separately (see http://shopmatrox.com). This section describes how to use the TV output feature.
3 Connect video output To connect to a TV or a video recorder, you’ll need a composite video (RCA) or S-video cable. If your video device (a TV or a video recorder) didn’t come with one of these cables, these types of cable are available at most electronics stores. The type of cable you use depends on what your video device supports. Many video devices support composite video connections, and some higher-quality video devices support S-video connections.
4 Connect audio output Typically, the sound output from a computer comes from speakers connected to your sound card. If you prefer, you can hear or record the sound output from your computer using the same TV or video recorder you connect to your graphics card. To do this, you need an audio cable with a stereo jack on one end and two RCA connectors on the other end. If you don’t have this type of cable, you can buy one at most consumer electronics stores.
Software setup If a TV or video recorder is connected to your Matrox product, you can use TV output mode to view or record your display on your TV or video recorder. (To connect video devices to your computer, see page 20.) TV settings have lower resolutions and refresh rates than typical computer monitor settings. Lower refresh rates may result in more noticeable flicker. Note: Two TV standards are supported for TV output. The NTSC standard is used in North America and Japan, among other places.
Extra troubleshooting Graphics The following troubleshooting items address problems related to graphics cards. Problem Can’t use Windows, Windows reports a configuration error, and/or can’t install or uninstall Matrox display driver Note: Windows 2000/XP or NT 4.0 – You may need administrator rights to install certain software. For more information, see Windows documentation. 1Cause 1Solution 2Cause The problem may be specific to the motherboard in your computer.
4 In the following folders, remove all files or folders related to “PowerDesk” (pd*.*), “Matrox” or “MGA”. (For more information on some files, right-click on them in Windows Explorer, then click Properties Æ Version. The following paths assume default installations and may be different on your computer.) C:\Windows\Start Menu\Programs\StartUp C:\Windows\Startmenu\Programs C:\Windows\System C:\Program Files Note: Recent versions of Matrox PowerDesk for Windows 98/Me (5.
Problem Monitor settings aren’t automatically detected WARNING: If incorrect software monitor settings are used, your display may become unusable and some monitors can be permanently damaged. For more information, see your monitor manual. Note: To check if your monitor settings are properly selected: 1 Windows 98/Me/2000/XP – Right-click your Windows desktop background, then click Properties Æ Settings Æ Advanced Æ Monitor. If you’re using multi-display mode, select a display before clicking Advanced.
3Cause You may be using BNC connectors with a Plug-and-Play monitor. The Plug-and-Play feature of a monitor can’t be used with BNC connectors. 1Solution If there’s an HD-15 connector at the back of your monitor, use this connector instead of the BNC connectors.
Problem Setup program reports an IRQ problem (3D and video programs don’t work) 1Cause 1Solution Your computer or program may not work well with bus mastering. Disable bus mastering: (If you want to continue using bus mastering, see the other solutions.) Windows 98/Me/2000/XP – 1 Access the Matrox PowerDesk Options property sheet (see “Accessing PowerDesk property sheets”, page 9). 2 Clear the Use bus mastering check box. 3 Click OK Æ OK Æ Yes to accept the changes and restart your computer.
1Solution Change settings in your computer BIOS setup utility. If your computer has the options of enabling Plug-and-Play detection, or assigning an IRQ to a VGA adapter, make sure they’re enabled. If your computer doesn’t have these options, you may be able to manually assign an IRQ to your graphics card using the BIOS setup utility. For more information on the BIOS setup utility of your computer, see your system manual or contact your system manufacturer.
Problem Game for Windows 98/Me/2000/XP doesn’t start or runs slower than normal (program uses Microsoft DirectX interface) 1Cause 1Solution Problem 1Cause 1Solution 30 An older version of DirectX may be installed. The Matrox CD-ROM setup program installs DirectX, but some programs install an older version of DirectX (overwriting your version). To see what version of DirectX is installed: 1 Access the Matrox PowerDesk Information property sheet (see “Accessing PowerDesk property sheets”, page 9).
Using multiple displays… Problem 1Cause Using multiple displays under Windows 98/Me/2000/XP or NT 4.0, program doesn’t work with main graphics card Your main graphics card may not be controlling your primary display. The graphics card that controls your primary display is the one that first displays information when you restart your computer. (A DualHead-supporting graphics card may display this startup information on both of its displays at the same time.
2Solution Windows 98/Me/2000/XP – For advanced users – To use a program that doesn’t support multi-display systems, you can disable all displays other than your primary display: 1 Through the DualHead property sheet, make sure the DualHead Multi-Display feature is disabled. To access this property sheet, see “Accessing PowerDesk property sheets”, page 9. 2 Windows 98/Me – Click Start Æ Settings Æ Control Panel Æ System (double-click) Æ Device Manager.
Problem Not all graphics cards in the computer are fully supported (Software doesn’t work with a certain graphics card, or another graphics card doesn’t work at all) 1Cause If you have different models of graphics cards in your computer, your Matrox display driver may not support all the graphics cards in your computer. Under Windows 98/Me/2000/XP, a display driver may support one or more graphics cards.
Problem 1Cause 1Solution In multi-display mode, displays aren’t numbered consecutively If you have more than one graphics card in your computer, the display numbering may not be consecutive for the displays of a multiple-display card (for example, a DualHead supporting card). Display numbering depends on the types of expansion slots used in your computer (AGP and PCI) and the BIOS settings of your computer. Windows* 98/Me/2000/XP – Move the displays in Windows.
3 2Solution Click OK Æ Yes to accept the changes. (Depending on the feature you disabled, you may have to restart your computer for the changes to take effect.) Disable Windows effects: Windows 98/Me/2000 – 1 Right-click your Windows desktop background, then click Properties Æ Effects. 2 Disable one or more features under Visual effects. Windows XP – 3Solution 1 Right-click your Windows desktop background, then click Properties Æ Appearance Æ Effects. 2 Disable one or more features.
3 Delete any display adapter other than the one for your Matrox graphics card. 4 Restart your computer. Note: If you identify a program that doesn’t work well with Matrox acceleration, please contact Matrox technical support (see page 54) and describe the problem. This information may help us come up with a fix or work-around in a future driver release.
4Cause The program window or dialog box may be somewhere off-screen. 1Solution If the program window you want to see is named on the Windows taskbar, right-click on it and select Maximize. (If you click Restore the program window goes back to its previous position. To fix this problem, see the other solutions.) 2Solution Manually move the program window or dialog box: 3Solution 1 Press [Alt]+[Space]. 2 If you see a pop-up menu, click Move. If you don’t see a pop-up menu, press [M] (for Move).
Problem Display on digital monitor appears blurry or uses only a portion of the screen 1Cause You may be using a lower display resolution than what your digital monitor supports. If your monitor supports display scaling, the image on your screen may appear blurry. If display scaling isn’t supported, the display may use only a portion of your screen. 1Solution Select the highest display resolution available. This generally results in better image quality.
Windows 98/Me – 1 Click Start Æ Settings Æ Control Panel Æ System (double-click) Æ Device Manager. 2 Double-click the Disk drives list item to expand it, then double-click the name of the drive device you’re using. 3 Click Settings, then enable the DMA check box. 4 Click OK Æ OK Æ Yes to restart your computer and for changes to take effect. Windows 2000/XP – 1 Windows 2000 – Click Start Æ Settings Æ Control Panel Æ System (double-click) Æ Hardware Æ Device Manager.
4Cause Your Matrox graphics card may be sharing an IRQ (interrupt request) with another PCI card in your computer (for example, a network card). Windows 98/Me – To see if your graphics card is sharing an IRQ: 1Solution Problem 1Cause 1Solution 2Cause 1Solution Problem 1Cause 1Solution 1 Click Start Æ Settings Æ Control Panel Æ System (doubleclick) Æ Device Manager. 2 Look in the list box to see if your Matrox graphics card is assigned the same IRQ number as another PCI card in your computer.
DVD The following troubleshooting items address problems related to DVD. (For general video-related troubleshooting items, see “Video”, page 38.) Problem 1Cause 1Solution Problem 1Cause 1Solution Problem DVD video playback is jerky (skipping frames) Your DVD drive may be too slow. If your DVD drive supports DMA transfers, enable this feature (see page 38).
3Cause 1Solution 4Cause 1Solution Problem 1Cause 1Solution Matrox software may not be set up for TV output. Particularly, the TV standard selected may not be correct. Windows 98/Me/2000/XP or NT 4.0 – See “Software setup”, page 23. TV output isn’t supported with full-screen DOS display modes (for example, the information you see before Windows starts) or with standard VGA mode (for example, when you restart Windows in “safe mode”). Older programs may use these display modes.
2 Under Font size, select Large Fonts. 3 Click OK to close the dialog box and apply changes. Problem Poor TV or video recorder image quality 1Cause Your software TV settings may need adjusting. 1Solution 2Cause See “Software setup”, page 23. There may be too many video devices between your video source and destination, or one or more of the video devices may be degrading the quality of the video signal.
2 Click DVDMax Options. 3 Select Preserve aspect ratio. 4 Select the aspect ratio of your TV (4:3 or 16:9 – most TVs are 4:3). 5 Select Detect based on video window size. 6 Click OK or Apply for your changes to take effect. For more information, see context-sensitive help. Sound The following troubleshooting items address problems related to sound cards.
Windows XP – a Click Start Æ Control Panel Æ Sound, Speech and Audio Devices Æ Sounds and Audio Devices. b Enable the “Place volume icon in the taskbar” check box. c Click OK. d Double-click the speaker icon on the taskbar. 2 Click Options Æ Properties. 3 Click the Recording button, enable all check boxes in the list box, then click OK.
Display information Notes 46 Your Matrox graphics card is 100% VGA compatible and supports all VESA standards: VBE 2.0 (Super VGA modes), DPMS (energy saving), and DDC-2B (Plug-and-Play monitor). Matrox graphics cards that can support a secondary display have the Matrox DualHead feature. The secondary display of your graphics card only supports a 16- or 32-bit color palette. 3D acceleration is only available with a 16- or 32-bit color palette.
G450-based PCI graphics cards are recommended for computers with Intel chipsets. With non-Intel chipsets, features and performance may be limited. Specifically, the bus mastering feature may not be supported and, as a result, the DualHead DVDMax feature may not be supported and OpenGL acceleration may not be available.
Maximum horizontal refresh rate (kHz) * Aspect Ratio 4:3/5:4 (traditional) 16:9/16:10 (wide) Display resolution Main display Secondary display† (360 MHz RAMDAC) (230 MHz RAMDAC) 640 × 480 130 130 800 × 600 130 130 1024 × 768 130 130 1152 × 864 130 130 1280 × 1024 130 120 1600 × 1200 130 107 1800 × 1440 130 — 1920 × 1440 130 — 2048 × 1536 130 — 856 × 480 130 130 1280 × 720 130 110 1600 × 1024 130 90 1920 × 1080 130 — 1920 × 1200 130 — * Based on a monitor wit
Hardware information Features Millennium G450 / G450 LX Graphics chip 3D features Millennium G450 PCI Millennium G450 LE Millennium G450 DVI Millennium G450 SH Matrox G450 Matrox G450 Matrox G450 Matrox G450 Matrox G450 (256-bit DualBus) (256-bit DualBus) (256-bit DualBus) (256-bit DualBus) (256-bit DualBus) VCQ2 (Vibrant Color Quality2), environment-mapped bump mapping, stencil buffering, anisotropic filtering, bilinear filtering, trilinear filtering, alpha blending, anti-aliased vectors, v
Digital monitor information (certain models only) TMDS (Transition Minimized Differential Signaling) encoding based on the Silicon Image PanelLink standard DDWG (Digital Display Working Group) compliant DVI connector EDID (Extended Display Identification Data) 1.2, 1.3 (without the extended data block), and 2.0 support Maximum card dimensions for ATX cards 5.90 in. / 14.98 cm 3.25 in. / 8.26 cm (PCI: 3.99 in. / 10.
Maximum card dimensions for low-profile cards 6.6 in. / 16.77 cm 2.54 in. /6.
Pin usage for an analog (HD-15) connector with Matrox TV output adapter (see “TV output”, page 20) 5 10 15 1 6 11 Pin Signal Pin Signal Pin Signal 1 Composite video 6 Ground 11 Not connected 2 Y (S-video) 7 Ground 12 Shorted with 15 by adapter 3 C (S-video) 8 Ground 13 Not used by adapter 4 Not connected 9 Not used by adapter 14 Not used by adapter 5 Ground 10 Ground 15 Shorted with 12 by adapter Pin usage for a digital (DVI-I) connector (Certain models only) 1 8 C1 1
Pin usage with an analog dual-monitor cable (DVI-I to HD-15) (Certain models only) 1 8 C1 17 24 C3 C2 9 C4 C5 Pin Signal Pin Signal Pin Signal 1 TMDS data 2– 9 TMDS data 1– 17 TMDS data 0– 2 TMDS data 2+ 10 TMDS data 1+ 18 TMDS data 0+ 3 TMDS data 2/4 shield 11 TMDS data 1/3 shield 19 TMDS data 0/5 shield 4 Analog red (2) 12 TMDS data 3– 20 Analog blue (2) 5 Analog horizontal sync (2) 13 TMDS data 3+ 21 DDC Clock (2) 6 DDC clock (1) 14 +5 V power 22 TMDS clock
Customer support Matrox Web Our Web site has product literature, press releases, technical material, a sales office list, trade show information, and other relevant material. Visit the Matrox Graphics Web site at www.matrox.com/graphics. Technical support Matrox values your business and offers professional support for your Matrox product. If your product was purchased through a Matrox dealer, contact your dealer for product support. This is the quickest and most effective method of technical assistance.
Driver and software download A more recent display driver may support more features and may offer increased capabilities (such as higher display resolutions). Matrox makes the latest display drivers, software, and system utilities available on the Matrox Technical Support Web site (www.matrox.com/graphics/en/support/drivers). View your warranty information Matrox makes warranty information available on the Matrox site (www.matrox.com/graphics/en/about/warranty).
Warranty A. Limited Warranty Statement 1. Matrox Graphics Inc. (“Matrox”) warrants to the end-user customer, who provides adequate proof of purchase that Matrox hardware products purchased from Matrox authorized dealers will be free from defects in materials and workmanship for a period of 3 years from the date of purchase. This warranty applies only to the original end-user purchaser and is non-transferable. Conditions and limitations of Matrox’s warranty are stated below. 2.
C. Limitations of Liability 1. EXCEPT FOR THE OBLIGATIONS SPECIFICALLY SET FORTH IN THE LIMITED WARRANTY STATEMENT, IN NO EVENT SHALL MATROX BE LIABLE FOR: a. any direct, indirect, special, incidental, consequential, foreseeable or unforeseeable, or punitive damages, whether based on contract, tort, delict or any other legal theory and whether advised of the possibility of such damages, and/or b.
Software license agreement Single User Products This Matrox software (the “Software”) is copyrighted by Matrox Graphics Inc. All rights are reserved. The purchaser is granted a license to use the software only, subject to the following restrictions and limitations: 5. The license is for the original purchaser only, and is not transferable without written permission of Matrox. 6. The original purchaser may use the Software on a single computer owned or leased by the original purchaser.
Index A address, Matrox Adobe Acrobat AGP PowerDesk 9, 12, 25 property sheets 9 F 55 19 FTP, Matrox 6 hardware acceleration 34 information 49–53 installation 2–3 S H 3 analog monitor B BIOS 15, 29, 31 BNC monitor connection bus mastering 16, 27 CD-ROM, Matrox 15, 19, 30 6 54–56, 57–58 customer support D DDC 10 digital monitor DirectX 6, 50 30 display modes 20 primary 15, 31 setup 9–12 46–48 DualHead 10, 40, 43, 46 dual-monitor cable 6, 53 DVI 5, 6, 50, 52, 53 display information E 3,
Thank you for choosing Matrox Please register online (http://www.matrox.com/graphics/en/registration) to be eligible for customer support, new product announcements, and information on special offers and upcoming events.
USA FCC Compliance Statement Remark for the Matrox hardware products supported by this guide These devices have been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation.
EUROPE (English) European user’s information – Declaration of Conformity Remark for the Matrox hardware products supported by this guide These devices comply with EC Directive 89/336/EEC for a Class B digital device. They have been tested and found to comply with EN55022/CISPR22 and EN55024/CISPR24. In a domestic environment these products may cause radio interference in which case the user may be required to take adequate measures.
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Copyright © 2011 Matrox Graphics Inc. • (English) All rights reserved. • (Français) Tous droits réservés. • (Deutsch) Alle Rechte vorbehalten. • (Italiano) Tutti i diritti riservati. • (Español) Reservados todos los derechos. Trademarks • Marques déposées • Warenzeichen • Marchi registrati • Marcas registradas Matrox Electronic Systems Ltd. / Matrox Graphics Inc..................................................
(English) Disclaimer THE INFORMATION IN THIS GUIDE IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE AT ANY TIME AND WITHOUT NOTICE. Matrox Graphics Inc. reserves the right to make changes in specifications at any time and without notice. The information provided by this document is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed by Matrox Graphics Inc. for its use; nor for any infringements of patents or other rights of third parties resulting from its use.
Matrox Graphics Inc. 1055 Saint Regis Boulevard Dorval, Quebec, Canada H9P 2T4 North America: 1-800-361-1408 International: (514) 822-6000 Email: graphics@matrox.com Web site: www.matrox.com/graphics Technical support: www.matrox.com/graphics/support To locate the sales office nearest you, visit www.matrox.