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Monitor Rotation

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Cuffy:
This looks like a good idea for certain applications.
Has anyone ever played around with it (other than as a prank)?

http://www.entechtaiwan.com/util/irotate.shtm

I was given a small, 13" TV set many years ago and I use to turn that on it's side to prevent getting a stiff neck while watching it in bed.

I was thinking of bed patients. Rotating the screen, depending on their position in bed, might provide some comfort to people in that situation.

The same would be true with TV, such as in the military hospitals, but that would require rotating the entire TV set.
Food for thought, though!

 :-\

Carol Haynes:
I remember back in the late 80s being amazed by an Apple Mac system that had a beautiful A4 monitor. It was designed for DTP with exact 100% A4 output.

The brilliant thing was that the monitor would rotate from landscape to portrait just by turning the screen on a pivoting base - as you rotated the screen the computer automatically rotated the video output to fit. It was truly gorgeous to look at and way ahead of its time. It even had dual momnitor capability. I don't know if that functionality is available in OSX or not - I have never heard anyone mention it.

There I said something nice about Apple!  :-[

PhilB66:
Has anyone ever played around with it (other than as a prank)?

http://www.entechtaiwan.com/util/irotate.shtm

-Cuffy (December 20, 2007, 01:05 PM)
--- End quote ---

Was already mentioned in another thread.

lanux128:
Entech is also the maker of the popular PowerStrip and tools such as MultiRes. just adding the screenshot for iRotate..

iRotate

iRotate provides convenient access to the native rotation capabilities present in contemporary display drivers, via a popup menu accessible from the system tray and optional system-wide hotkeys. It's no longer necessary to resort to bloated Windows hacks, additional software layers or phantom drivers to achieve content rotation. In most instances, support is now available directly from the graphics chip manufacturers, who continuously improve and apply quality assurance to their drivers.

• http://www.entechtaiwan.com/util/irotate.shtm

Cuffy:
When I posted this originally I was thinking more about the capability of rotating the display to accomodate a disabled person. The news is full of stories about our disabled trooops and I was curious about how much work had been done to use the features available in currently available hardware to aid the disabled?
Thirty years ago I turned a small TV set on it's side on the side of my bed to watch something. A disabled troop sure couldn't do that with a 21" portable nor with a 21" monitor.
With a monitor on a table beside the hospital bed could a patient easily rotate the display 90 degrees left or right, CW or CCW, without assistance. Is there simple software available to perform the action?

I don't have any answers and perhaps there is no need?
Henry J. Kaiser said many years ago "Find a need and fill it".
I saw the post from Entech about the display capabilities, the little trick of tipping the TV set on it's side popped into my mind. The thought process continued and I wondered if anyone had explored any of this and whether there was a need. My mind is warped! Something that moves, a box to tell it how, and a programmer to tell the box what to say seems like something waiting to happen. YMMV

I'm sorry if I confused anyone. Hopefully Kaiser filled the need already!

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