Drivers?
It will be a few weeks before I can "borrow" a IP address from a buddy of mine.
But, since I am having issues with another computer I'll ask you about that one. This particular computer is my desk top unit with win2000 on it and I just purchased a 22", 1680 x 1050 widescreen LCD for it. FYI, The laptop will eventually replace this machine entirely with a docking station. Anyway, I downloaded the new video drivers for this monitor but when I set the resolution to the proper specs 1680x1050, the monitor goes black. I can only run the monitor at 1600x1200 and obviously its scewed a bit and just a tad fuzzy.
Why can't I run it at the 1680x1050?
Kevin
I too started running 22" monitors, I picked mine up for $150 each on Black Friday

I knew that my video card might be an issue and it was. I had to throw two (dual monitors) newer video cards in the box until I could spring for a dual DVI nvidia 8600 card for $79.
Things to check... You will need the latest graphics card driver and a driver for the monitor itself. Both of these can be found on the respective manufacturers web sites. The default monitor.inf found in 2K and XP doesn't seem to cut it on the larger LCDs that have come out lately. If your graphics card does have the correct driver, you can pick up another card that will work fairly cheap.
As a suggestion, you could take your 2K box, toss in a litle RAM and a $40 graphics card. Download and install this on it.
PC-BSD - Home
It runs absolutely awesome on slightly older hardware, is based on the original AT&T unix code and is said to be one of the worlds most secure operating systems (derived fro freebsd). Don't let the installation scare you, it is super easy. Just a few clicks and waiting for files to copy, make an awesome internet machine. If it's a 1.ghz 512MB of RAM machine, you could also run
Ubuntu Home Page | Ubuntu
It has more support for applications and drivers but does perform the occasional OS update like Windows. You could then pick up a $20 2 port KVM so you can switch between your older PC and the new laptop, both sharing the 22" monitor. I have a 4port that supports XP, 2008 server, XP and a freebsd desktop at the same time, all from one monitor. I just thought I would throw this out there in case you wanted a computer that you could just walk up to and get online. Laptops can wear out a little faster when used all day, every day.