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QuickColor 2.21 README
February 6, 1997
-------------------------------------------------------------------
(c) Copyright EnTech Taiwan, 1996-97
HOW TO USE THIS DOCUMENT
========================
To view readme.txt on screen in Notepad, maximize the Notepad
window. To print readme.txt, open it in Notepad or another word
processor, and then on the File menu, click Print.
CONTENTS
========
LICENSE AND REGISTRATION
SUPPORT
QUICKCOLOR FUNCTIONALITY UNDER WINDOWS NT 4.0
QUICKCOLOR FUNCTIONALITY UNDER WINDOWS 95
INSTALLING QUICKCOLOR
NOTES ON SPECIFIC CHIPSETS UNDER WINDOWS 95
TIPS AND TRICKS
KNOWN LIMITATIONS
RELEASE NOTES
LICENSE AND REGISTRATION
========================
QuickColor is shareware. You must read and accept the terms
detailed in the license.txt file before you can use QuickColor.
An order form is provided in the file order.txt for the purpose of
registering this software.
SUPPORT
=======
QuickColor support is available from EnTech Taiwan via Internet
e-mail addressed to entechtaiwan@msn.com. Program updates are made
available over the Internet at http://www.entech.com.tw.
Registration keys which are issued apply to all future releases of
QuickColor.
QUICKCOLOR FUNCTIONALITY UNDER WINDOWS NT 4.0
=============================================
QuickColor is designed primarily for use with Windows NT 4.0, and
has been tested successfully with most of the drivers bundled by
Microsoft with the retail release of NT, as well as with a handful
of drivers recently released by various chiphouses.
Since NT 4.0 supports refresh rate settings, and can change
resolution and color depth on-the-fly, the main advantage of
QuickColor is a more logical and convenient approach to exploiting
these inherent features, combined with support for over 500 monitors
and the potential to associate programs and shortcuts with specific
display settings. While not particularly elegant and certainly not
intended as a Windows shell program, QuickColor associations provide
additional flexibility to your Windows desktop that can be hooked
into by other programs, or linked directly to standard Windows
shortcuts and/or Task Bar Start menu items.
Like Microsoft's QuickRes utility for Windows 95, QuickColor is
implemented as an icon with a popup menu on the system tray. But
instead of offering a menu listing all possible resolution and
color depth options, QuickColor features a configuration dialog box,
where you can select a monitor type, and define five prime "presets"
and up to twenty shortcut associations, which consist of resolution,
color depth and refresh rate settings. The configuration dialog box
is also, arguably, better organized than the native NT Display
Properties sheet: with a certain monitor and at a certain color
depth only some resolutions are supported, and at these color depths
and resolutions only some refresh rates are supported. An optional
floating toolbar is also available.
QUICKCOLOR FUNCTIONALITY UNDER WINDOWS 95
=========================================
Except for monitor type, which QuickColor reads from the Windows 95
system registry, QuickColor functionality under Windows 95 is
identical to NT 4.0, provided your graphics card is implemented
with a standard BIOS and you are using a driver which has been
certified by Microsoft for use with DirectX under Windows 95.
QuickColor has been successfully tested with the following types of
graphics cards, using standard BIOS and driver releases from the
chiphouse, as well as drivers written by Microsoft and included with
the retail release of Windows 95, the OEM release of OSR2, and
DirectX 2.0 and 3.0:
* 3Dlabs - Permedia/Permedia NT
* Alliance ProMotion - 3210/6410/6422/AT24
* Avance Logic - 2228/2301/2302
* Cirrus Logic - 542x/543x/544x/546x/548x
* S3/2d - 911/924/801/805/928/864/964/732/764/765/775/785/868/968
* S3/3d - 325/375/385/988
* Trident - 8900,9440,9660,9680
* Tseng Labs - ET4000/W32i/W32p/ET6000
Refer to the section on specific chipsets below for any further
information and caveats.
NB: Under Windows 95, if you receive an "Error starting program"
message which says that "A required .DLL file, DDRAW.DLL, was
not found." then you need, at a minimum, to download and
install the DDRAW20.ZIP file from the QuickColor page of our
web site at http://www.entech.com.tw. (The error message also
suggests that your display driver is badly outdated...)
INSTALLING AND CONFIGURING QUICKCOLOR
=====================================
QuickColor software consists of just two files - QCOLOR.EXE and
QCOLOR.DAT - and features what we hope is a reasonably intuitive
drag-and-drop interface, with hints. The QCOLOR.DAT file is a
simple ASCII text file, which contains monitor definitions for NT
and default refresh rate settings for Windows 95 which you should
feel free to edit.
To install QuickColor, you must have a PC running Windows NT 4.0 or
Windows 95. These instructions assume that you have already
successfully installed the very latest display drivers provided by
your graphics card manufacturer or by Microsoft with DirectX (for
Windows 95).
To install QuickColor software, carry out the following steps:
1. Right-click the file QColor.Inf using the Windows Explorer, and
then click Install.
2. Restart your computer.
3. Double-click the QuickColor icon on the system tray, or select
QuickColor configuration... from the QuickColor popup menu or
toolbar.
4. Select color depth, resolution and refresh rate combinations of
your choice and drag-and-drop on Preset button to save setting,
or on monitor image to preview setting.
NB: Out of consideration for parents with home PCs, QuickColor
accepts an optional command line switch which instructs the
program to automatically switch to one of the five presets on
start-up, e.g., qcolor.exe /x, where x is 1 to 5. Note that
QuickColor's default "Safe Mode" of 640x480 in 256 colors at
60Hz also happens to be the optimal display settings for
running DirectX games and many multimedia titles. (You can
change the default setting if desired - 3Dlabs, for example,
works best in HiColor modes.) Parents can also create
shortcuts to children's programs using QuickColor associations
and standard Windows shortcuts (see "Tips and Tricks" below).
To remove QuickColor from your computer, select the Add/Remove
option from the Control Panel, and select "QuickColor (remove
only)" from the list.
NOTES ON SPECIFIC CHIPSETS UNDER WINDOWS 95
===========================================
Cirrus Logic - If QuickColor is unable to change the refresh rate
and a Cirrus Monitor Refresh property sheet is available, ensure
that the "Auto Detect Use DDC" option is checked. (This is
especially important with the new Laguna/3D series of chipsets and
drivers.)
3Dlabs - If QuickColor is unable to reach refresh rates above 75 or
85Hz, ensure that the refresh rate property under the Permedia
device configuration setting box is set to "maximum". The latest
driver releases from 3Dlabs may be limited to 100Hz.
Ark Logic - Recent Ark Logic drivers which attempt to implement a
"virtual desktop" are neither certified by Microsoft for use with
Windows 95 nor compatible with QuickColor.
TIPS AND TRICKS
===============
* To add a program or shortcut to the QuickColor menu, either
select a file using the QuickColor browse button or drag and drop
the file on the QuickColor dialog box from the Windows Explorer.
* To select an associated program or shortcut from the QuickColor
toolbar, right click on the QuickColor toolbar icon.
* Shortcuts to programs are preferable to programs themselves for
associations because QuickColor can read additional startup
information from them (working directory, parameters, etc.); only
executable programs and sh