The next task is to get a more stable picture. The picture will sometimes get out of sync and the pixels is not too stable on the screen. My current thinking is that the Voltage is not good on the video signal driving circuit. The whole computer is powered by a USB connection (~4.94V on the input side and drawing 465mA). However the voltage on the video output circuit has dropped to 4.51V. Will need to workout how to fix this.
Use a separate power supply if you can, or double up on 2 USB outlets from your PC. USB(1,2) is not designed for high power and if the PC was doing it properly would only allow 100mA before shutting down the power to the USB socket. (there is a power negotiation protocol - rarely used on most PCs) Clearly your PC, like 99.5% of all PCs and Laptops haven't been fitted with current limiting devices, but it may have a 500mA polyfuse (self resetting thermal fuse) or similar.
If doubling up, it might be worthwhile taking the lid off your PC to make sure there is a separate fuse for each outlet - sometimes there is just one for a bank of 4 USB sockets. Polyfuses are usually green, or easy to tell apart from the usual SMT resistors.
I ran into exactly this issue trying to power the backlight a 20x4 LCD board - it dropped the USB supply voltage down to a level that made the entire board unstable. I fitted a separate 5v PSU for the display and all was fine again.
Cheers,
-Gordon