Hey Culip, glad you found a fix for your problem. So, this leads me to ask "what have you downloaded" to have that driver show up in device manager? You have downloaded something, which is/was the essence of your phantom monitor as your screen shot shows. Now the real task is founding out where it came from and was it attached to some other software that was downloaded.
It's a bit long story, so I sum it up here:
Summary
What was I doing?
- I bought and installed Air Display (software for Android/iOS & Windows which allows you to use your tablet as a secondary monitor for your Windows PC) onto my Android tablet and Windows PC in 2012. It worked perfectly.
- I stopped using Air Display, but Air Display manager started up every time I booted up Windows. Annoying. I disabled its start up by configuring msconfig (but didn't uninstall it.)
- Updating nVidia driver triggered the problem.
Is Air Display Malware?
- No, I don't think so. Air Display has received extraordinary reputation at app stores despite being paid software. Also their designers mightn't have concerned if users would disable the driver on msconfig without uninstalling it.
- Today's Air Display may/may not be different than the one I installed in 2012.
- I also scanned the whole system with Microsoft Security Essentials and Spybot. No adware had been detected; the result implied that Air Display might not be adware.
What should we learn from this incident?
- Removing applications from the startup list on msconfig may cause troubles. Instead, we should uninstall applications/drivers even though it's usually more tedious.
- We'll have more opportunities to sync our Windows PCs with tablets/smartphones as these have become more popular, and making big changes in our hardware settings. Therefore, we are very likely to encounter this kind of problem in the future, and so it must be worth learning how to solve it. This problem is not Air-Display-specific.
The Whole Story
On November 18, 2012, a friend of mine asked me if he could use an Android tablet as a secondary monitor of his own Windows 7 laptop. Fortunately, I had already owned both: a Windows PC and a Kindle Fire HD (Android tablet which has Amazon App Store instead of Google Play). In Amazon App Store, I could find the popular software called
"Air Display" that was exactly what I was looking for, so I bought it for $10. I also installed Air Display for PC which was free ($0) onto my Windows 7 PC. And it worked just perfectly as advertised, and so I took a picture of it and sent it to the friend.
A few weeks later, I returned my Kindle Fire HD since it didn't match my expectation. Then I felt guilty about it when I was asking Amazon for the full refund, and so I told them not to revoke & refund Amazon apps I had purchased.
However, every time I rebooted Windows on my PC, Air Display manager started up too--and I didn't like it. I disabled it on the start up list in
msconfig. As a matter of fact, I didn't uninstall the Air Display driver.
Afterward I updated nVidia driver several times, and problem occurred--sometimes (strange enough) problem was fixed--and the problem occurred again with the latest version (v320.49). As I said, I uninstalled nVidia driver, but the problem had never fixed. That's why I'd suspected nVidia driver rather than Air Display.