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Dell Sx2210 Driver For Mac

I'm using an aluminium unibody MacBook (pre unibody 13' MacBook Pro) running 10.6.7 with a Dell SX2210 external monitor. The monitor has a built in webcam and USB hub.

When I try to use the webcam with my Mac I often a very strange looking green and purple picture, as shown below. The problem isn't specific to just one app as it's the same in both Photo Booth and Skype.

Also the iSight built into my laptop works just fine. The strange thing is that for a couple of minutes after plugging in the USB cable the picture is fine, but then it starts degrading - at first just a couple of of spots of green show up, and then it gradually spreads. I've had the monitor for nearly 2 years now and it definitely didn't do this when I first got it. However recently I've been wanting to use Skype more and found that it's doing this.

I didn't install any drivers for it so I guess it's just using standard USB video drivers built into OS X. I don't have easy access to another Mac or PC to try this with but I have tried a different USB cable, to no avail.

Dell monitor drivers for mac

Dell Sx2210 Specs

I'd greatly appreciate any suggestions!

Dell Sx2210 Driver For Mac

Sx2210b Driver

Hello: I have Dell Desktop with Intel integrated graphics card. There's is only one VGA port in the back of the tower.

I do see what appears to be an HDMI port directly above that. I'd like to add another monitor so as to have an extended display. I did try a USB to VGA adapter. But those really do require USB 3.

I have only USB 2 Is there an inexpensive way to hook up another monitor for regular internet viewing, given that I have only that one VGA port, and one HDMI port? Thanks Eli Windows 10 Version: 1803 Operating System Windows 10 Home 64-bit CPU Intel Core i3 550 @ 3.20GHz 29 °C Clarkdale 32nm Technology RAM 8.00GB Dual-Channel DDR3 @ 665MHz (9-9-9-24) Motherboard Dell Inc. 0C2KJT (CPU 1) Graphics DELL SX2210 (1920x1080@60Hz) Intel HD Graphics (Dell). Why can't you use the HDMI port for the 2nd monitor? The Intel HD should support 2 displays. Otherwise, the motherboard does have a PCIe slot that you can install a graphics card into.

A GT710 goes for around $35 new - and you can go cheaper with used cards off eBay/Craigslist. Thanks, Polar: I only see a VGA port-and cable coming from- the 2nd monitor. I do see HDMI to VGA adapters sold very cheaply though. Would those work for this situation? It isn't primarily to see videos I want 2nd monitor, though that would be nice as well. It's for everyday display purposes. For visual reasons, I need different display properties for different programs or sites.

'Otherwise, the motherboard does have a PCIe slot that you can install a graphics card into. A GT710 goes for around $35 new - and you can go cheaper with used cards off eBay/Craigslist' If I get another graphics card installed, wouldn't I still face the same issue with having only one VGA port in the back of the tower to connect the second monitor to? Or does installing another graphics card somehow entail creating another VGA outlet. I've never gone inside the innards of the tower, so excuse my totally layman level here.I'd need to hire someone to install that card, I'm afraid.But might be worth it -eliuri. Computer Type: PC/Desktop System Manufacturer/Model Number: 2-Custom Computers, ASUS Desktop, Dell Inspiron 580 Desktop + Dell Inspiron 15R Notebooks 2 + more OS: Win10 Home and Pro, Win10 Insider Preview, WinXP Home Premium, Linux Mint CPU: AMD and Intel Motherboard: ASUS, GigaByte, others Memory: 16GB in ASUS, max. 4GB or 8GB in all others Graphics Card: AMD ATI Radeon or Onboard, ASUS with nVidia GT-710 Sound Card: Onboard Monitor(s) Displays: HP 21.5' Touchscreen, ASUS 27' 4-input Screen Resolution: Usually 1440x900 Mouse: Microsoft Optical Mouse, Wireless and Bluetooth mice with Notebooks Hard Drives: Various internal HDDs and USB HDDs plus 2 x 2TB NAS drives connected to Router.

Internet Speed: 5Mbps Browser: Internet Explorer 11, Firefox and SeaMonkey, Edge when absolutely necessary Antivirus: Windows Defender Other Info: Also running Linux Mint on a Desktop and a Notebook. HP Laserjet and HP Officejet printers connected to Router. All setups I've seen that worked with dual monitors used an Add-in PCIe X16 video adapter/card with 2 ports on it, 2 VGA or 2 DVI or 1 VGA and 1 DVI. Getting Windows to recognize and use both can be problematic at times. Thanks Berton: I gather from the above that its the lack of an add-in graphics card that more likely hampered the dual display, rather than the secondary monitor I tried to use. I had actually used that very same monitor to set up extended display with a Windows 7 laptop but that had an AMD graphics card and its own VGA port.

It worked nicely. Truth is I know very little about graphics cards and installing them.So my apologies if my questions seem primitive. Is it true that if I have an integrated Intel Graphics card and then add another one into one of those slots, that I do not need to uninstall or remove the Intel HD Graphics already there now, and can use both? That I can then shift from one to the other?