Whenever I’m at home I hookup my laptop to a secondary 24″ monitor to drastically increase the amount of screen space available to me. When I’m working on programming projects I will rotate my monitor so that it is oriented vertically (a.k.a. portrait mode), which I think is something most programmers do when they have widescreen monitors.
Physically rotating my monitor doesn’t change the screen’s orientation though, and for that you’ll need some software. Most graphics cards are bundled with a control center that will let you change such properties, but I often find them a bit bulky. Below we’ve got three different methods that you can use to change the orientation of your monitor without using the software that came with your graphics card.
Note: All of these alternatives depend on your graphics card supporting screen rotation. This might require installing the drivers for your graphics card, which are typically offered separately from the software control center that they offer.
–Windows Hotkeys–
Believe it or not there is a standard Windows hotkey (in both XP and Vista) that will let you change the orientation of your primary monitor only. The shortcut is Ctrl+Alt+[Arrow Key], where you use the standard arrow pad on your keyboard to change the orientation. Ctrl+Alt+Up will always set your monitor back to the usual landscape orientation.
–Vista Settings–
All editions of Vista except for Home Basic now come with Tablet PC support regardless of whether your machine is actually a Tablet PC. If you only want to rotate the primary monitor you can use the Tablet PC settings in Vista to rotate the screen orientation.
The easiest way to find the Tablet PC settings is to open the Start Menu or Control Panel and start typing “Tablet PC” in the search box. You want to click on the “Tablet PC Settings” option when it is displayed. Then look for the orientation option that you can adjust:
Unfortunately this only works for the primary monitor on the system, but I’m guessing that there are more people out there looking to do this with a single monitor rather than multiple monitors.
–iRotate (Homepage)–
This is a free program that creates a System Tray icon for each of the monitors connected to your machine. You can click on each icon to see the various orientation options that are available to that monitor. That means in a few clicks you can quickly switch between orientations.
iRotate will also set itself to start with Windows to ensure that all of the monitors remain in the correct orientation. Hotkey junkies will appreciate the keyboard shortcuts that are provided for each of the four orientations, which can be seen in the screenshot above.
–Overview–
I’m sure there are dozens of other ways that you can change your monitor’s orientation, and that’s where we turn it over to our readers. What tools, if any, do you use to adjust the orientation of your screen?
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Tags: CyberNotes, Freeware, Software, Windows, How To, Settings, Windows Vista, Windows XP


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I believe, but not sure, that the Ctrl+Alt+[Arrow Key] hotkeys methods only works if you have an Intel graphics board, because that’s the default hotkeys assigned by their display manager. If you have an ATI/AMD card, you can go to the Catalyst Control Center and assign the hotkeys that you wish to change the display settings, including the rotate screen.
It worked on my ATI card without the Catalyst Control center installed.
Not to question you, but I can’t rotate the screen of either my Vista laptop or my XP desktop with the Ctrl+Alt+[Arrow Keys], unless I enable it on the Catalyst Control Center.
That could be because you’ve installed the Control Center though, which would take precedence over the standard Windows shortcut.
I had to enable the hot keys via:
Display Properties>
Settings>
Advanced>
Intel Graphics Media Accelerator Driver for Mobile>
Graphics Properties>
Hot Keys (check the “Enable Hot Keys” box)
I’m on a MPC T1300e laptop, running XP
Hi!
It is not working on my XP. Even enabled intel graphics hotkeys.
There are some boxes with Pivot installed. I would like a totally free or even an universal open source solution for this, and that let the windows default rotate the screen during boot.
TIA!
This article saved my life! (we maybe a little melodramatic) I had a friend call me saying that he’s broken his laptop screen by leaning on the keyboard …
This article and CTL-UP ARROW fixed the problem lol
It’s such a cool prank to play on your friends too.
I saved your life? Would that make me a hero?
I had to setup the keys in my Nvidia Desktop Manager. I’m now writing with my screen to the right. It’s tricky! Good though, nice long pages in FF!
A few weeks ago my screen flipped sideways seemingly on its own. I pushed all the buttons on the side of my lcd monitor and finally got my orientation back to landscape by cycling through the monitor input. over the next couple of weeks it did it 2 more times. Then it started happening more and more frequently. I have checked the setting in both windows and the video card and have disabled screen rotation all together in both places, yet it still rotates on its own, about a dozen times now. The only common thing I notice when this happens is that I am moving the mouse when it happens. Could this be a virus?? Could low batteries in a wireless key board or mouse cause this?
Low batteries in your keyboard or mouse would not likely be the cause of that. It does sound like some sort of virus or application incompatiblity. Have you tried booting into safe mode yet?
no I haven’t done safe mode yet, what will that do? And now just today my monitor has flipped back to 270 degrees and no matter what I do it won’t stay at zero when I force it back. Coming to wits end here. I have to view my monitor in potrait mode now. That really sux since all the apps i use need to be in landscape.
NEWS FLASH!!! I updated the intel video chip set drivers, rebooted and everything seems to be back to normal, for now anyways!!
Safe mode might block any of the virus’ actions, which could help troubleshoot the issue. But it looks like you already got it taken care of.