aida64 lcd panel in stock

One of the strengths of AIDA64 has been providing users with precise and abundant hardware monitoring information. The software offers several ways to visualize sensor data, such as clock rates, temperatures, voltages, fan speeds etc. For the past few months we have been working hard to give you even more opportunities for displaying such info: we"ve been adding support for a huge number of external displays,VFDs (vacuum fluorescent display), LCDs and even OLEDs.

Using such devices can come in handy when you want to keep an eye on hardware related information at all times, even when watching a movie or playing a game in full screen. Now AIDA64 can send information to external displays directly, without the need to use third-party applications. And you can select and edit what and how you want to show on these displays, right from AIDA64.

The latest stable already supports dozens of displays, and the number is constantly growing as our developers are working hard to implement support for even the most exotic panels you guys may be using. Your feedback is welcome here: if you happen to use displays that AIDA64 does not support yet, please let us know in the forums.

LCD support has been designed with power users in mind, users who prefer customizing every single detail in both the layout and the set of displayed values. In this blog post we want to show you how you can create a customized LCD in AIDA64.

Specifically, we are going to describe how you can populate a color LCD with hardware monitoring info as well as some eye-candy. However, AIDA64 supports a couple of less fancy devices as well: if you use alphanumeric displays or monochrome LCDs your options will obviously be more limited. On an alphanumeric device, for example, you can only visualize “Simple sensor items”, that is text, while monochrome LCD can cope with some basic imagery only.

Abacom / Acer / Adafruit / AlphaCool / Aquaero / AX206 / BWCT / CH424 / Crystalfontz / ct-Mausekino / Cwlinux / Dangerous Prototypes / Digital Devices / EastRising / EVGA / Futaba / GLCD2USB / Gravitech / IkaLogic / LCD Smartie / LCD2USB / LCDInfo / Leo Bodnar / Logitech Arx / Logitech G15G19 / LPT Mad Catz / Matrix Orbital EVE / Matrix Orbital GLK / Matrix Orbital GX / Matrix Orbital LK / Modding-FAQ / nMedia / Noteu / Odospace / Odroid / Pertelian / Phidget / picoLCD / POS / Pyramid / Razer / RemoteSensor / Roccat / Saitek / Samsung / SDC Megtron / SoundGraph iMon LCD / SoundGraph iMon VFD / SpikenzieLabs / Sure / Trefon / UCSD / USB2LCD+ / VL System LIS 2 / VLSystems LIS / Wallbraun / Yoctopuce

If you use a color LCD, you have the choice to use either a background color or a custom background image. You can come up with spectacular results both ways. If you go for a solid color background you have to specify the color here. If multiple pages are available on the display, the color selected here will be used on all the pages. If you want a custom background image, you have to upload it in the editor (see step 4 below). The tabs often give you the chance to adjust brightness and/or contrast for monochrome and alphanumeric displays.

Now let"s open the LCD layout editor which is available in File / Preferences / Hardware Monitoring / LCD / LCD Items. What you"ll see here is a preview of the external display and the list of items shown on the panel. To those who have already experimented with the SensorPanel the editor will look quite familiar: it"s not a coincidence as both work exactly the same way. The only difference is that here you can design more pages for a single device, if the external display can handle multiple pages. You can select each page by clicking on its tab, just like you do in web browsers.

Now let"s add a background image to the blank panel. To add an image, click on “New”, then select “Image” from the drop-down menu, browse to the file"s location, and click OK. Note that currently BMP, JPG and PNG images are supported.

Hint: you can add any image to the display this way, and set its position on the panel by specifying the X and Y coordinate values. But you can also position any item in the layout by selecting it in the item list and using the arrows on the right. We can move items up or down in the list. Items are displayed as layers on the display, and this list determines the order of the layers: the topmost item in the list will be the background layer, the next one the first layer and so on. By default, an item listed under another will cover at least parts of those listed above it if they overlap each other on the panel. Because of that, always make sure to make the background image the topmost item.

Hint: If you are not satisfied with the default gauges, and you are not afraid of using Photoshop or other graphics editors either, feel free to create and use custom gauges. To do this, you fist need to draw all the 15 possible indicator states and upload them one by one in AIDA64 by selecting Custom in the Type menu, and then clicking on the “States” drop-down list. (You can download the default AIDA64 gauge states from here [link]. Feel free to modify them!)

The same way, you can add further items, like further graphs, bars, text and images to the panel. There are a couple of options available for each: for example, you can set the min and max values for each item. Or you can set the values when the color of the bar should change, eg. from green to yellow and then to red as the CPU or GPU is getting hotter. In the latter case, bear in mind that you need to set the bar color-coding thresholds so that they match the characteristics of the monitored

Hint: You can also display whatever labels you want for each sensor item. It"s recommended to change the default label which is usually too dull and too long. :) You can even delete the labels, which may come in handy on low-resolution alphanumeric LCDs where each pixel counts.

In the Preferences / Hardware Monitoring / Update Frequency menu, you can set how often AIDA64 Extreme updates the sensor readings on the LCD. Currently, the lowest selectable refresh rate is 500 ms.

Bonus: Even though AIDA64 cannot measure FPS in games, with a little help from a friend it can show FPS info on external displays. You need to install and run FRAPS to make this happen. When FRAPS is running, it will appear among the available sensor items.

aida64 lcd panel in stock

AIDA64 Extreme, Engineer and Business support several ways to display sensor measurements on your desktop. Not only can it log all sensor values in a log file or make them available to external applications, but it can also display an OSD Panel in any Windows editions, a Sidebar Gadget in Vista and Windows 7, sensor icons in the Notification Area and, last but not least, a nice SensorPanel, too.

The SensorPanel is the one of the more spectacular monitoring modules AIDA64 offers. It has been designed with power users in mind, such users that prefer customizing every detail in both the layout and the set of displayed values. This is why it takes some time to come up with a nice panel like this:

2) We are going to use a 500x145 pixel background image we have designed. As we know the image dimensions, we can set the SensorPanel size in Preferences. In this settings window, there are several other options you can choose from.

AIDA64 currently does not support transparent backgrounds: you can either use a solid color background or a nontransparent background image of your choice. But there"s a trick: if you want your SensorPanel to look as if it were transparent on the Windows desktop you can cut out a section of the desktop background image and use it as a background image in your SensorPanel. Then all you need to do is position the SensorPanel to the same area on the desktop which you cut out before.

3) Now let"s switch to the SensorPanel. We can access the SensorPanel Manager by right-clicking on the panel area. In the Manager, we can see the list of items used/displayed on the panel. As we want to create a fully customized SensorPanel, let"s delete all default items.

4) Now let"s add the background image to the blank panel. To add an image, click on “New”, then select “Image” from the drop-down menu, browse to the file"s location, and click OK.

Hint: you can add any image to the SensorPanel this way, and set its position on the panel by specifying the X and Y coordinate values. But you can also position any item on the panel by selecting it in the SensorPanel Manager list and using the arrows on the right.

5) Now we are going to populate the blank panel with sensor items: first, a gauge indicating CPU Utilization. Let"s select “New”, then “Gauge” from the “Item type” drop-down menu, then “CPU Utilization” from the list. We can customize the gauge by selecting the size, color, label, font type etc. we want to use.

AIDA64 gives you the opportunity to change the color of the gauges in the drop-down menu “Type” (available options are black or white). However, if you are not satisfied with the look of the default gauges, and you are not afraid of using Photoshop or other photo editing software either, you can create and use custom gauges or indicators as well. To do this, you fist need to draw all the 15 possible indicator states and upload them one by one in AIDA64, then select Custom in the Type menu, and then click on the “States” drop-down list. (You can download the default AIDA64 gauge states from here. Feel free to modify them!)

Again: you can position any item on the SensorPanel by entering the exact X:Y coordinates on the item preferences page, or by selecting it in the SensorPanel Manager list and using the arrows on the right.

7) The same way, you can add further items, like further graphs, bars, text and images to the panel. There are a couple of options available for each: for example, you can set the min and max values for each item. Or you can set the threshold values when the color of the bar should change, eg. from green to yellow and then to red as the CPU or GPU is getting hotter. In the latter case, bear in mind that you need to set the color thresholds in such a way that they match the characteristics of the monitored hardware as 60 Celsius may be absolutely normal for a GPU, while it is way too high for a HDD.

8) In Preferences / Hardware Monitoring / Update Frequency, you can set how often AIDA64 updates the sensor readings. If you want a really dynamic SensorPanel, set the update frequency to 1 second or less, instead of the default 5 seconds.

9) Now that your customized SensorPanel is ready, it is time to decide if you want to load and display it when Windows starts. If so, all you need to do is go to File / Preferences / General and check both “Load AIDA64 at Windows startup” and “When AIDA64 starts Hide the main window (minimize to System Tray)”. This way AIDA64 will launch at Windows startup and display the SensorPanel without loading the main program Window. This can also be displayed any time by clicking the AIDA64 icon in the notification area.

Please bear in mind that the SensorPanel (just like the OSD Panel or the AIDA64 desktop gadget) will not be visible when playing full-screen 3D games or full-screen video even if “Keep SensorPanel the topmost window (always on top)” is selected. If you want to display hardware monitoring readouts during gameplay or video playback, you can use the latest and greatest RemoteSensor feature, an external LCD, a second monitor, the RivaTuner export option, or use sensor value exporting.

aida64 lcd panel in stock

You Could Use CORN Secondary Screen as a Secondary Screen for AIDA64 Data Monitoring(You could contact us for some AIDA64 modules for free). You Could Watching Moive While Playing Games, Dynamic Picture and so on...

aida64 lcd panel in stock

HannStar Display`s 8.8 inch TFT-LCD is a color-active matrix thin film transistor (TFT) liquid crystal display (LCD) that uses amorphous silicon TFT as a switching device. This model is composed of a TFT LCD panel, a driving circuit, and a backlight system. This TFT LCD has an 8.8 (1:4) inch diagonally measured active display area with (480 horizontal by 1920 vertical pixel) resolution.

This 8.8 inch LCD is very popular with PC gamers as a secondary display, the customer can use AIDA64 to display temperatures, FPS, Frequency, and Memory Utilization. There are two versions to choose, with or without a shell. Panox Display also provides holders for each display.

AIDA64 is a tool for testing software and hardware system information. It not only provides multiple functions such as overclocking assistance, hardware debugging, stress testing, and sensor monitoring, but also provides a comprehensive evaluation of processor, system memory, and disk drive performance. Can also monitor a variety of computer performance data, and performance monitoring functions in addition to hardware monitoring tools and OSD screen display items, there is an LCD tool, if you have an idle extended screen, may wish to use both to make a better performance data display for yourself.

As we know, Type-c can provide 5V and 900mA/1.5A/3A even without PD protocol. Panox Display has made Type-C controller board for 8.8 LCD, which can be connected to PC and some mobile.

Panox Display values every opportunity to cooperate with clients, because TFT-LCD is very fragile, so we provide a solid package and the fastest way to ship. Panox Display has seven years experience of in international trade and served more than 1000 clients all over World.

To make your development of the TFT-LCD driver more smooth, Panox Display will provide free connectors and an adapter board, engineers can directly fly lines to the main board.

With the development of technology, more and more products will need display panels. Panox Display also keeps following the latest display technology.

First, you need to check whether this display has On-cell or In-cell touch panel, if has, it only needs to add a cover glass on it. If not, it needs an external touch panel.

Because the shape of the cover glass depends on the design of the clients, to avoid infringement of appearance, most of the developers need different customized touch panels.

aida64 lcd panel in stock

This is a 14-inch long strip IPS screen with a resolution of 1920*550. It can be used as a temperature monitor of the computer case. Aida64"s hardware monitoring can display temperature, voltage, fan, and network speed, giving you a clear view of your system. It can also be used as a computer secondary screen, as a secondary screen for live broadcasting, games, etc. Portable and convenient screen with an audio jack, brightness/sound adjustment knob, and power switch. 100% color gamut and 178° viewing angle, a better visual experience. It comes with an HDMI data cable and a MicroUSB data cable, as well as a stand, and supports Windows, Linux, Mac OS, and other systems.