New
#11
What problems do you have with that driver? On the device manager, why don't you just right-click it and disable it rather than uninstalling if Windows keeps reinstalling its driver after reboot anyway.
What problems do you have with that driver? On the device manager, why don't you just right-click it and disable it rather than uninstalling if Windows keeps reinstalling its driver after reboot anyway.
Well, I finally got the new TV working by plugging the old monitor back in and then following the procedure from the link in my OP to tell windows it's a non-PNP flat screen monitor. Obviously this wouldn't have worked if my old monitor was broken, rather than just being changed out. I can't believe that with all that has happened in the computer industry, ATI doesn't have a way to let you use new monitor when your old one breaks, but judging from my lack of success in both my own posts and looking at others I found on Google, it really doesn't. I saw a few guys with the same problem who reported that NVidia cards worked could handle this, but ATI cards don't. It seems I would have had to reinstall Windows in order to get ATI to work with my TV.
Anyway, I now have a great picture at 1680x1050 and several smaller resolutions, but I thought I should be able to get 1920x1080. THAT problem is probably specific to my TV, which is a new model, so I won't bother people here with it.
Thanks to everyone who responded; I appreciate your efforts.