How does a DTD interact with Intel Graphics drivers?
Driver software, like most other software in Windows, modifies the Windows registry to include various pieces of configuration information the program needs to always be able to find. When you run setup.exe or whatever executable installs the new software, one thing which occurs is that one or more .INF files are parsed and used to determine which registry entries need to be created and modified. In the Intel graphics drivers, the .INF files in question are: XP: igxp32.inf Vista 32: igdlh.inf Vista 64: igdlh64.inf Normally speaking, the Intel drivers seem to provide the standard list of resolutions: 640×480, 1024×768, even some “home theater” resolutions like 1920×1080 and 1280×720. It’s when you get away from the standards and into the more “interesting” panel displays and plasmas that you can’t seem to get what you want out of the drivers by default. Never fear, there is a workaround. Many of Intel’s OEMs (Dell, HP, Gateway, etc.) bundle their machines with monitors with “nonstandard