If you’re using an older laptop that doesn’t have an HDMI port, your answer might be VGA port. Select this video to view the easy connection and setup process. Try the recommended version, but if that doesn’t appeal to you, you can fiddle with other settings. You will also have the option of using different resolutions. Select the TV in the drop down box that appears. If your laptop does not automatically output its screen to the TV, go to your Desktop, Right-click your mouse, and go to Display Settings > Display > Adjust Resolution, you can also get there by going to the Control Panel. Set your TV to the correct input for HDMI, and the laptop should automatically configure to provide the best settings. Connecting the two devices is no more difficult than using an extension cord.
Most HDMI cables are inexpensive, and the port on your TV should be easy to find. The HDMI port looks like a longer and thinner version of the USB port that you’ve probably used for flash drives, printers, and other devices. Most laptops built over the last Half-decade have an HDMI port (which stands for “High-Definition Multimedia Interface”). The easiest way to connect your laptop to your television is with a cable that hooks into each device.
There are several ways to do this, and it’s simpler than you might imagine. The solution? Keep that big TV working by feeding it directly from your laptop.
However, they don’t always want to consume that content off the smaller screens that come with laptops and other devices. In their search for entertainment, many people have cut the cable (or satellite), preferring to get their programming off YouTube and other Internet sites for little or no cost.