This morning I dropped my laptop, and as a result have the image below. Is there anything I can do to at least be able to see the screen without having to plug it in to an external monitor?
4 Answers
I think it is impossible to economically fix that screen. The effect you are seeing is caused by breaking conductors inside the screen. Basically, TFT screens have horizontal and vertical conductors inside for each row and column of pixels (second image on the link). Once the connection is cut, pixels from the breakpoint are uncontrollable. If you press the screen in certain places, you might temporarily restore the function of some pixels, but as soon as pressure is removed, they will go off-line.
1You will not be able to repair the screen itself in order to make it "viewable", the best you will be able to do is to replace the screen itself from somewhere like
You may be able to find a guide on the internet on how to replace your screen or you can send it out for replacement.
You could ssh or remote desktop into it if you had set it up before hand. Otherwise an external monitor is your best bet.
Good news is there are a plethora of good sites now that can walk you through a laptop screen replacement. And the cost of LCD's is not as prohibitively expensive as they once were.
2There is a way out. I dropped my usb3 external ASUS monitor. It showed storage colours. I found that pressing the back of the monitor shows correct colour. So I put it face down on the table. Pressed the back in straight strokes with a soft cloth, gradually covering the whole back. The monitor is now back to original colours.
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