As the title says, apparently Tiger will sport a built-in Pivot function without the need of a special video card or driver, according to Macbidouille.
Sweeet, I say. 😀
Building a feature like this into an operating system requires some internal changes:
1. Assumptions in Quartz about aspect ratios being bigger on the left than on the right (as an example, a typical (landscape) CRT aspect ratio is 4:3) need to be eliminated.
2. The graphics drivers Apple ships will need to be tweaked to be compatible with change #1.
3. The Monitors pane of System Preferences needs major revisions to allow access to all the possibilities such a feature opens up.
Once all of those are in place, the only things preventing this feature from being used are whether or not the monitor supports rotation and whether or not it is physically stable when rotated.
Should be, Nvidia and ATI drivers for Windows have supported this with any monitor for a while.
Ahh, finally I'll be able to hang my display upside down ;P
(seriously though, this guy I know has his display hanging above his desk upside down with it's base tied to the bottom of the bed - and I'd like to try it to free some deskspace.)
Should be, Nvidia and ATI drivers for Windows have supported this with any monitor for a while.
Ahh, finally I'll be able to hang my display upside down ;P
(seriously though, this guy I know has his display hanging above his desk upside down with it's base tied to the bottom of the bed - and I'd like to try it to free some deskspace.)
This sounds good. I've been contemplating getting a Dell LCD which pivots, and I'd like to be able to use that feature in OS X. The el' cheapo wintel boxes at work do this easily, and it's been bothering me that my Mac can't do the same.
The big question is if it's autosensing. Back in the Classic Mac OS days, if you had a pivoting monitor, the pivot would automatically be detected and the screen would change to reflect the pivot. I don't have a pivoting display, otherwise I'd test it out. Any developer out there that can?
-Chase
As far as auto-sensing goes, the display would have to tell the computer that it was rotated. I don't think most pivoting displays have a built-in sensor to accomplish this.
As far as auto-sensing goes, the display would have to tell the computer that it was rotated. I don't think most pivoting displays have a built-in sensor to accomplish this.
or the computer can remember such and such display was or wasnt rotated but it would cause probs if you had 2 identical ones and only wanted one tilted still its better than no auto sensing