On Saturday 05 July 2003 07:34 pm, you wrote:
> Friends of mine brought me a computer and wanted to see if I could
> figure out why it wasn't geting more than basic colors.  It runs win95,
> she got it from her boss at work when they got new puters for the
> office.  It has a VGA adapter, no video card inside.  It also has two
> motherboards.  One on the bottom and then a half board on top.  The top
> board holds the ethernet cards and a modem.  It only has 32 mg of
> memory.  It runs fine but I have no idea how to get a video card in
> there.  Do they make short cards.  It has PCI slots (2) avail.  How hard
> will it be to find one, if there is such a creature?   They are trying
> to get is set up for her sister who has no puter and can't afford one.
> Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.  Thanks, Maureen
What's going on is that the proper "driver" is not installed. Thus it's 
using the generic VGA driver which only have 16 colors.
To find which driver you need you can look at the board and find a few other 
chips (or bigger flat components) on the motherboard. (The motherboard is 
the big one that has other card(s) plugged into it.)
Look on the biggest of these chips and you will find writing on them. They 
will say who manufactured them and have a model number. Then you go to 
f.ex. google and search using one set of numbers from that chip. 
On an Intel chip it may say:
INTEL
PCIset
SB82437VX
L6442534
SU116
INTEL C R M '95
We know from here that it was made in 1995 and belongs to s series of chips 
based on the 824 series of chips.
So you get to play detective a bit. If you search using the first row with 
numbers in it on google. Something like this:
+SB82437VX +"video driver" +download
The plus sign says it has to include the following "word", and the quotes 
says search for these exact words. If you don't get a result wich contains 
the driver, you can always omit the plus sign for download as they may have 
a graphics link with the word download and google cannot read that.
>From the search results you will now find a driver that is needed for that 
chip set. Install it and it should now be able to use all colors.
You may need to read a few results from google before you find the right 
one. Often it finds a bunch of messages from people searching for the same 
thing and so you'll find people with the same problem. If you see two 
entries in a row that has the same looking lines and the second one is 
indented, read that one first as it is a reply to the first one. This way 
you may end up reading someones reply with a solution to the question 
'where can I find this driver'.
It should not take more than a couple of minutes to find. If not you should 
stop and try another letter+numbers "word" from the chip. 
--Steve
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