Wednesday, September 15, 2010

What is the difference surrounded by LCD monitors?

I am planning to buy a topical monitor for a new PC, and I wasn't sure what category to get. I do net design on it and I watch plentifully of movies. I also do photo editing and digital drawing. I want something with nice sharp picture, but I wasn't sure what adjectives the numbers mean on the listings. I hold been looking at Tigerdirect. Could someone explain the differences and what adjectives the little numbers mean for respectively?



23 1366x768 / 720p Native / 8ms / 700:1 Contrast Ratio / HDMI / ATSC Tuner / HD LCD TV



Samsung SyncMaster 216BW 21.6 Widescreen LCD Monitor - 5ms, 1000:1(DC 3000:1), WSXGA+ 1680x1050, Gloss Black, DVI-D, D-sub, 300 cd/m2



The 1000:1 thing and the 720p are what I dont read at all. Please impart your acquaintance upon me.


Answer:

The number 720 stands for 720 lines of vertical display resolution, while the letter p stands for progressive scan or non-interlaced.



1000:1 is a contrast ratio this explains it:

The contrast ratio is a determine of a display system, defined as the ratio of the luminosity of the brightest color to the luminosity of the darkest color that the system is capable of producing
LCD's are no appropriate for graphic design. If youre serious, you want a CRT (a regular comp monitor). Theyre bigger and bulkier, but the color reproduction is much better and own no viewing angle constrictions as most cheap LCD's do.



LCD's also have a original resolution-- a single setting they look best at. If you change this setting, they become blurry. This is not the shield with CRT's.


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