Flat Monitors

Tim ignored_mailbox at yahoo.com.au
Mon Oct 29 14:16:55 UTC 2007


Tim:
>> Wouldn't you be better off to find what's being demonstrated in stores
>> near you, and pick which looks best?

Mike Chambers:
> Probably, but was just checking anyway.  I work part-time at walmart and
> they have Proview and HP ones, but due to budget and what not, the
> Proview will probably be it.  Just rather find one for under 200 if
> possible, like 19/20" wide screen would prolly work.

Whilst it's probably good to ask about things to be avoided, and thing
to try and find, I really think you need to see things like monitors in
action.  Specs are all very well and good, but if the thing's dim,
flimsy, needs viewing at precisely the right angle, doesn't have the
connectors you want, relies on windows to control brightness/contrast,
etc., you're going to be really annoyed.

If you do any graphic work, LCDs are crap.  The colours/shading/etc
change radically depending on your angle of view.  If you absolutely
must get an LCD and you do that sort of work, then you really need to
find one with a wide angle of view, both horizontally, and vertically,
but especially vertically.  You'll mostly sit in front of a monitor,
rather that side on, but how close you sit, and the tilt angle, changes
very easily with just a slight change in body position.

The LCD on my laptop is really annoying.  You have to sit way back,
further than you can with a laptop, before you get to the point that the
whole screen has the same shading.  At normal distance, the top of the
screen is different than the bottom.  It's about as bad as those old
rear-projection Kodak Carousel slide units with the fresnel screens.


-- 
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