Now as I mentioned earlier you can use any mix of monitors with AMD’s Eyefinity providing one display port is used. To summarise out of the 2 DVI ports and the HDMI port you only actually have 2 usable interfaces at any given time. The reason for this is that if a graphics card has 2 DVI connectors, 1 HDMI connector and 2 mini display ports – only two of the non-display port outputs can be used at any given time due to the limitations of the graphics card. Unlike NVIDIA’s Surround you can mix and match digital and analogue monitors with Eyefinity, the only requirement is that one of the Display Ports is used. ![]() ![]() I couldn’t find a definitive guide on what you can and cannot do with Eyefinity so I’ll try and include as information as I can without digressing too much or overcomplicating the whole process. The different configurations available with AMD’s Eyefinity can become confusing at time, without knowing when you need an active or passive adapter, knowing what you can convert to what etc. However we do get some questions with regards to configuring AMD’s Eyefinity and hopefully this guide will help users get setup and working in no time. ![]() ![]() When AMD launched the 5000 series GPUs they also announced AMD Eyefinity (formerly ATi Eyefinity) a technology that allowed the use of 3 to 6 monitors on a single graphics card.
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