Dell Offering 1600x1200 Laptops 128
Fervent writes "Dell has started offering laptops today with the new UXGA screens. These higher-res LCD screens proport better, clearer graphics at no extra power cost. Details on the new laptops are available at CNet." They don't say how big the actual screen is, but ya gotta be scared... I can see 1280x1024 on a 15" screen, but 1600x1200 is pretty scary... I find a lot of things to small at that res on a 21" monitor. Then again, just pump up the font size and everything is crisper... of course those icons on web pages sure don't get any more legible.
hi res != tiny letters (Score:4)
Will people please keep in mind that the size of fonts on screen is in no way proportional to the size of the individual dots on the screen.
Smaller dots means that an individual character of a certain size will be drawn using more pixels, leading to a sharper and more well defined representation of the character.
If you cannot understand this, then just memorize this little example. ;-)
In the old days (more than 5 years ago) laser printers printed at 300 dots per inch (dpi), now a cheap one prints at 600 dpi and good ones at 1200 dpi.
Text printed on a 600 dpi printer isn't half the size of text printed on a 300 dpi printer
BTW. 1600x1200 on a monitor with 18" viewable area gives around 120 dpi. 1024x768 on a monitor with 14" viewable area gives around 75 dpi.
Bad pixels? (Score:1)
Too small? Use a fresnel lens! (Score:2)
What do you guys think?
Re:Dead pixels (Score:2)
Surely you cannot. The Fine Print explicitly gives the number of bad pixels that the manufacter defines as "acceptable"; less than that and you do not have a warranty issue because it isn't "faulty" by definition. I've seen fine print that allowed FIFTY dead or always-on pixels. Your only real choice is to make sure your vendor has a "no questions asked" refund policy, get your money back, and try some other store and/or manufacturer.
Browsers shouldn't be that much of a problem (Score:3)
Generally, it's either 96 or 72, and I'm sure that if it were 200 ppi it would work just fine.
Of course, those designers who insist on rendering every little thing as a bitmap are screwing this pooch... bitmaps don't scale or have a "size" per-se, outside of their pixel dimensions.
Some others have mentioned that Opera's renderer can zoom on the fly... which solves both problems.
For anyone who's interested in this stuff, there's an excellent (in-progress) related article here:
http://style.metrius
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Troll? No sense of humor. (Score:1)
Agist fucks.
The childish demand that the elderly subsidize a younger person's lifestyle is marked +4 insightful (funny, maybe, but insightful? Give me a break.) while the above humorous reposte is marked down as a troll?
As a young person (who would love to have some georgious older woman set him up in style) I would say this agist shit reflects very, very poorly on the slashdot crowd (the moderators in particular, not the original post or the reposte, both of which I found rather funny).
Perhaps humor is simply too difficult a subject for this forum?
Re:Dead pixels (Score:1)
Interesting. Thanks for the clarifications.
~Cederic
Fractal Encoding-5k to bmp-2.1M (Score:1)
Re:Textbooks and UXGA screens (Score:2)
Re:Call the eye doctor. (Score:1)
Re:icons on web pages (Score:1)
I completely can't understand this point of view. Every single icon I know of is too freakin huge. I run 1600x1200 at work, and 17--x13-- at home just so I can get the icons, titlebars, and other widgets small enough to allow my content windows to reclaim some of the desktop.
and I never hear anyone else support this point of view... are you all going blind from too much you know what, particularly you UI designers? What is with the huge freakin icons!
Does it make me happy to have the larger resolution displays become standard? NO! When they become standard, all of the wankers will simply adapt, and start issuing ever larger spoodge.gifs to fill up the new screens.
I love my Inspiron 7500! (Score:2)
Shame I still need to reboot into windows to watch DVD's legally.
Any Slashdotters out there know how I can hack my Torisan 6x dvd drive to go Multi region?
Why this is a good thing (tm). (Score:1)
Re:Textbooks and UXGA screens (Score:1)
e-Books will be great, especially at >150dpi on a device around 6.5" by 5" (1024x768). Colour isn't important though, greyscale is fine for books. For textbooks though, I can see the advantage of colour.
But there is still nothing like the feel of a proper book...
Re:icons on web pages (Score:1)
In short, the default 640x480 is simply _impossible_ to use. I used to run 1600x1200 on my 19" monitor, but it looked pretty bad, so I "let" it slip down one level. I really want to get one of the $2,000 Sony 21" monitors that supports _enormous_ resolutions. (2K something by 19xx something).
And don't don't get me started on the Internet connection. Essentially, all 50+ computers went through a dedicated 56K connection... (It was "true" 56K, though). I tried to talk the computer teacher into buying at least one T1 line. (It might have been in the OC-x ranges... )
SUWAIN: Slashdot User Without An Interesting Name
Sweet (Score:2)
Set things up so the popular Linux GUI environments can scale to vastly larger resolutions, and you get the following delightful result:
Re:Yet another reason... (Score:1)
Actually, this exists already (sorry, no link). Read in some graphics magazine that the military uses a special grayscale display that has 600DPI and is as sharp as a printed page. Costs an obscene amount of money of course.
Which is UXGA vs SXGA+ vs SuperMegaXPlusUltra? (Score:2)
Which sets of letters actually correspond to which resolutions? 1600x1200, 1280x1024, 1920x????, 1153x900, 1024x768, etc. Thanks!
I'm coding your "High Resolution Solution!" (Score:1)
And... 1600x1280 (or larger) DOES look like *#$%& on a 15" display (as far as fonts/icons are concerned) and I've got 20/20 vision; As a developer I LOVE more resolution real estate.
I work for Portrait Displays, Inc., Pleasanton, California. Our company is known in the industry for our Portrait/Pivot display utilities(rotating displays).
I'm a software engineer, working on a new product which "fixes" this problem with hi-res/hi-density displays.
We are currently working with several large computer and display manufacturers (unable to name them here, but they are the leaders in the industry), testing our product in preparation for shipping later this year.
We (and the display industry as a whole) expect these new hi-density (133-200ppi, pixels-per-inch) displays to become prevelant over the next couple of years.
I personally expect to remain quite busy, working late hours, getting the product to market;
But rest assured - We've got the software solution!
And - 133-200ppi looks FANTASTIC!
The product is not currently listed on our company web-page, as we're still testing and negotiating contracts for distribution.
Visit: www.portrait.com (soon) for details & pricing.
I have an 15" SXGA+ Dell (Score:1)
It does 1400x1050 which seems just about perfect for most of my work.
Sadly, I have yet to figure out how to make Linux able to use it, and thus am stuck with Windows on it for the near future.
Its the first time in a linux install that I've ever got sound working before video.
I feel bad though, now I don't have the biggest laptop screen on the block anymore
Tim Gaastra
resolution vs viewing space (Score:1)
The moral of this story is, (Score:1)
Silver lining (Score:1)
(...given a moderate commuting length and a spirited attitude toward the ride, of course.)
Re:hi res != tiny letters (Score:1)
The point is, regardless of what kind of font you use, a sample of 12pt type should look the same at 120dpi as it does at 75dpi. So needing to manually adjust "font size" is stupid. Changing icon, toolbar, and widget size may be necessary, however. (And people laughed when they saw 128px icons in MacOSX)
(incidentally, I run at 1280x1024 on a 17" CRT, 110dpi)
Re:Browsers shouldn't be that much of a problem (Score:1)
... and have you ever tried printing a web page?
"One or two a week"? (Score:1)
If you get 2 tech support calls per week for the 5000 model, out of (pulling a number out of the air) 100 (20 per day?), then you have a rate of 2%. In numbers shipped (not dollars) how does this 2% compare to the sales of model 5000 laptops? Based on numbers sold, does the model 5000 still compare well? Does it compare well for it's audience? (Percentage of machines sold to that class of user, whether power user, generic business user, or whatever.)
Do you only do laptops, or do you do tech support for all Dell PC products? This will also affect how valid your data point is.
If you don't have this information, that's okay, but presenting a bare number and pretending it has significance without knowing context and how it relates to sales figures... well, that's how bad statistics are made.
Re:Browsers shouldn't be that much of a problem (Score:1)
You're right, though. Browsers just read pixels. Of course, because no image formats that are web-centric have built-in resolution yet (not even PNG!) it doesn't matter.
You can specify an embedded flash in "em" units, or inches, or whatever. It works! Hopefully, SVG will work the same way. It should.
I suppose that you could also specify that an image was 1 inch by 2 inches, via style/DOM, but I'm not sure it would look very good. Bitmap scaling code in browsers sucks. It works well when printing from a browser, though... I've done that, it works.
SO, I guess what I'm trying to say is that the infrustructure for resolution independent display is in there, it's just not hooked up to the right places to make images work.
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Mac OS X screwed this one up (Score:2)
This was a big mistake. Now that very cool things are starting to happen with X, I believe that we will end up creaming Apple.
Re:Seeing more on screen (Score:1)
I bind f10,f11,f12 to switch to screen 1, 2, 3 quickly. You can have a screen dedicated to programming, one to netscape window(s), one to games for example.
Pity there is no real equivalent for NT though (only some inconvenient things that try to approach it).
Re:Resolution Independent GUI (Score:1)
Good idea, but I'm not sure it's done on RISC OS...
(course I may be wrong)
Re:Dead pixels (Score:3)
Most manufacturers will NOT accept the screen back under warranty as a matter of course. I have tried with IBM when a laptop showed with 1 bad. They said tough. I begged. I screamed. 1 bad pixel is "well within the manufacturer tolerance".
Unless you buy your laptop retail, and inspect it before you leave, you generally have 2 options -- return it to the manufacturer and then buy a new one (too much of a hassle), or try and make more pixels go out and make it look like a defect (harder than it sounds).
Manufacturers do make exceptions. However, in my experience, unless you make a really good case, you can forget about getting any satisfaction if you claim 1-2 pixels are stuck off.
Re:Call the eye doctor. (Score:1)
800x600 should be enough for anybody, then?
:)
Re:Resolution Independent GUI (Score:1)
Hopefully this will never happen. Why? Because the aspect ratio is 5h1t3. Once you've worked on a widescreen monitor it's a bloody nightmare going back to 4x3, it's like going from a 21" 1280x1024 back to a 14" at 800x600, but worse.
Give me 1960x1280 or give me death
Mike.
Re:The market is lopsided. (Score:4)
Nicked from the BBC Micro (Score:1)
An idea way in front of its time.
Good news (Score:2)
Re:But it'll be TFT (Score:1)
Re:Call the eye doctor. (Score:1)
Funny though, that even after a minute of photo-quality screen use, everything seemed crunched together when I set it for 800x600.
Re:icons on web pages (Score:2)
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DPI setting on X (Score:5)
See the tip on linux.com [linux.com]about it.
Make sure to read the comment by Andreas Plesch on the tip as well, as a better method for setting the DPI is given than the original suggestion.
I work for Dell and have seen a pre-production (Score:3)
Re:Call the eye doctor. (Score:1)
Re:The market is lopsided. (Score:1)
And, for you women out there, when my girlfriend drives it, she says it's the skeeziest of guys who give her the most attention
People make the assumption that if you drive a fast convertible, you're just itching to give money and cocaine and diamonds in exchange for sex. Or maybe that's just here in Los Angeles.
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bukra fil mish mish
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Monitor the Web, or Track your site!
Re:1400x1050 already there, 1600x1200 will rock! (Score:1)
Gah, I can't believe I missed that. MUST. RUN. OUT. AT. LUNCH. Buy 30 Gig harddrive...
No sleep till SuSE!
Tim Gaastra
Re:higher resolution?!?!? (Score:1)
be desired on the 1400x1050 lcd.
Re:Dead pixels (Score:1)
Re:I have an 15" SXGA+ Dell (Score:1)
Re:1400x1050 already there, 1600x1200 will rock! (Score:2)
Re:Way...way to small... (Score:1)
Megapixels (or, Showing My Age) (Score:2)
Re:But it'll be TFT (Score:1)
-----------
"You can't shake the Devil's hand and say you're only kidding."
Can't get UXGA with DVD? (Score:1)
Re:Fractal Encoding-5k to bmp-2.1M (Score:1)
Re:who cares?? (Score:2)
But it'll be TFT (Score:2)
TFT screens are a lot clearer and dont suffer the same way that monitorimages do from blurriness.
What however would be really good would be a monitor mode which reported itself as 800x600 but whenever windows was called upon to render text it could use the extra resolution for excellent clarity.
That way you could have icons and graphics all at a decent size but with lovely crisp text. And programs like Coreldraw could be made aware of the resolution difference... just a thought tho.
Re:who cares?? (Score:2)
Would give a good presentation laptop (Score:1)
Now, when are they in stock?
Re:who cares?? (Score:2)
higher resolution?!?!? (Score:1)
at last i can view my pr0n in absolute crispness!
The market is lopsided. (Score:4)
Just like how i'll be deaf by the time I can afford a decent hifi, and by the time i've saved up enough cash for a nice tvr sports car i'll be way past the age i need to be to pick up chicks in it.
Why cant higher quality stuff be sold cheaper than the low quality stuff so all the old people who dont know better subsidise me having a quality lifestyle.
Re:Spelling (Score:2)
Call the eye doctor. (Score:2)
I've really been impressed by the Dell laptops though. I work at a design firm that does a lot of CAD stuff, and one of my co-workers used one to finish up a highly detailed Pro/Engineer model on a plane ride. That's pretty impressive, considering the video demands, as well as the fact that that kind of work is pretty painful on anything less than a 21"
Re:first penis fish ever (Score:2)
Resolution Independent GUI (Score:2)
Are there any fixes for this problem? What happens when we get 4000x3000 displays?
Textbooks and UXGA screens (Score:3)
Does anyone know whether textbooks are available in e-book form?
Actual size is 15-inch (Score:4)
Great news, hope the vertical view is better (Score:2)
One good side effect of having such tiny pixels is that dead pixels are far less noticeable than they are on lower resolution displays.
I know what I want for Christmas
Suits and Windows ME (Score:1)
- Derwen
Tabletop (Score:1)
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Under revision.
Your eye doctor approves. (Score:1)
Resolution is good.
If you're working with low-res characters in dot-matrix calculator-vision, then they need to be big to be able to see them. If they're on a higher resolution screen, then they get better shapes, anti-aliasing etc. which makes them more readable. Although there's no simple "all 9 pixel high characters are readable" rule, it's certainly the case that smaller characters at better resolutions are more readable than larger characters, if their resolution is worse.
How small can you comfortably read on a screen ? On high-res paper ?
Resolution independent browsing (Score:1)
What browsers should be doing (if the host GUI isn't... remember RISC OS?) is provide a "zoom" button.
You know, so you can actually read those web sites designed for 800x600 on larger screens, the browser would be aware of its window size and have a button that says "Scale as if res was 800x600"
Then it resizes your fonts and the images accordingly. That would be a very cool feature, IMHO.
[please don't bother to reply saying 'shut up and go code it yourself' - I know...]
Seeing more on screen (Score:1)
I never want to go back to just one monitor again - I run my main screen at 1600x1200 (19") and a 15" next to it at 800x600 (though that might change) - it's so useful being able to keep stuff open all the time without it cluttering up your desktop.
Re:Resolution Independent GUI (Score:1)
Microsoft of course have tried to do this kind of thing within Windows, but in my experience if you change the display scaling Microsoft's own software, including the OS itself, will fail to display properly. Buttons fall of the bottom of windows, and whole rows of sheet tabs in panels often dissapear if you've got your font display at 125%+.
display vs. print (Score:2)
Therefore, I strongly endorse the notion that we are now to the point where increases in screen resolution can be used to improve the quality of text display, rather than just making the old crufty 7x5 dot patterns illegibly small.
Remember, 9pt type should be 1/8" between baselines, NOT 9 pixels. (Obapologies for the American ruler and the implicit MICROS~1 bashing
Re:Tabletop (Score:1)
Seriously though, I'm surprised they are sticking to the 4:3 aspect ratio here, I think 16:10 (like apple) would be equally if not more consumer acceptable, and require less pixels
Re:But it'll be TFT (Score:3)
You mention Windows, so I'll add that Win16 and Win32 have always drawn their GUI elements as a multiple of ::GetSystemMetrics(SM_CXBORDER) (and SM_CYBORDER). However, none of the drivers I've ever seen have ever taken them up on it... all drivers define those metrics as one pixel.
It's probably a self-defining problem: since most app writers are lazy or don't know this, they write THEIR apps to measure in pixels and not border-multiples or logical points. Any driver manufacturer that experimented with adjusting these metrics probably found 30% compliance and 70% noncompliance with all the apps out there.
Thus, you can see why device drivers would find it hard to decide what gets drawn bigger, and what doesn't.
I would imagine the same sort of "uneven compliance with standard methods" would appear in X, Motif, Qt, etc., but I would also imagine that mentioning this will invite lots of followups that say such things wouldn't happen to their beloved platforms.
Re:Call the eye doctor. (Score:1)
With that said, look at the LCD screens. A lot of them are *very* high resolution, and *very* clear. (I'd give my first born cat for one.)
However, on my LCD screen I run 1024x768 and it's clear as day at 15" (14.7" viewable.
Answer: resolution on a 15" laptop screen depends on screen quality more so than size.
-- Talonius
Re:Resolution independent browsing (Score:2)
Re:But it'll be TFT (Score:2)
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"You can't shake the Devil's hand and say you're only kidding."
Vaio (Score:2)
1. you sit closer to a laptop screen
2. there is no flicker
3. in the right conditions backlit LCD is brighter than CRT
I was scared at first, but is very readable with no apparent eye strain.
Re:Resolution independent browsing (Score:1)
Re:Does it run Linux ? (Score:1)
Certainly the Inspiron 7500 that I have does, and I run Linux on a daily basis (and I'm using it right now).
The ethernet card took a while (30 mins) to get working, but everything else works fine. And that includes the suspend to disk, which really surprised me. The only thing lacking is the DVD player ;-)
Re:icons on web pages (Score:3)
Isn't it about time more browsers had this?
That's not really a solution. OK, you can zoom in and examine a graphic in detail. (Does that icon really look like an eagle with an erection? Is that a mole?) But what about a page -- or application -- that requires a specific number of pixels to display? If you zoom out to get, say, a superwide HTML table in view, everything's too small to read. Zoom in and you can't possibly follow the thread of text.
Here's an example: when I upgraded to Win2K, I forgot to make sure a driver for my video card was available. So, using the generic VGA driver (640x480 only) I go to support.dell.com, enter my service tag, and am taken straight to the download page. But there's no download button on the download page! Being a nonvisual person, it takes me a while to figure out that all the page content is exactly 750 pixels wide, and if I already had the driver I was trying to download, I would see the download icons neatly aligned on the right.
Problems of graphic size and layout are symptomatic of two larger problems:
Re:The market is lopsided. (Score:1)
I hope for your sake that this won't be true. What may be true is that you would be too scared to drive the car the way it's designed to be driven.
Old fucks like myself are supposed to be buying sports cars, but here I am still riding my damn bike into work every day. This is not a good way to pick up chicks.
1400x1050 already there, 1600x1200 will rock! (Score:2)
Re:Quartz (Score:2)
Re:Resolution Independent GUI (Score:2)
Re:Which is UXGA vs SXGA+ vs SuperMegaXPlusUltra? (Score:3)
(digital RGB)
CGA = 320x200x4 colors
EGA = 640x400x8 and lower
(analog RGB)
VGA = 640x480x16 colors
SVGA = anything better (even 640x480x256!)
Later, it was altered:
VGA = 640x480x* (any color depth)
SVGA = 800x600
XGA = 1024x768i (interlaced - IBM's original XGA)
EXGA = 1280x1024
The Unix modes 1152x864 and 1152x900 never got
those silly acronyms, since the Unix world is
typically more precise.
The SXGA, SXGA+, and UXGA labels are just
marketing B.S., moreso than the originals... at
least they were named after the video cards that
supplied those resolutions. (you just _knew_ if
a monitor was advertized as VGA it could _not_
display 800x600!)
FYI: Dell's versions are:
XGA = 1024x768
SXGA = 1280x1024
SXGA+ = 1400x1050 (wierd!)
UXGA = 1600x1200
A great place for history and info is the Winn L.
Rosch Hardware Bible (I think that's the right
spelling)
Later,
Kevin
Yet another reason... (Score:2)
Pumping up the font size isn't going to work for everything. Is there an open Display Postscript? If not someone should get on it real quick.
On the other hand, no, on the SAME hand, I can't wait until my display device has comparable resolution to my hardcopy device.
Re:Resolution Independent GUI (Score:3)
Yes, of course there are fixes. First, it's possible to do a decent job of scaling *anything*, even bitmap fonts and pictures, if you take a halfway decent approach to the problem. Hint: do you know what a sinc filter is? If not, you better find out fast, or you have no business writing a bitmap stretcher.
Second, a lot of the formats that are now becoming popular are inherently resolution-indenpendent, for example, any lossy image compression format - jpg (DCT), fractal encoding
We need to carry this kind of resolution-independent design all the way through the entire system - from Web design to automatic screen geometry to font rendering. A huge task, but it's underway.
Probably the biggest obstacle is entrenched page/screen designs that were for some incomprensible reason, done with the assumption that screen resolution would never change. For a good example of this, just go to Yahoo. Notice how it's increasingly taking on the appearance of a postage stamp in the middle of your screen. (Note: screen resolution doesn't just *increase* over time, it decreases too. If you don't believe me, check out IBM's Linux-on-a-wristwatch.)
Even in the face of thoughtlessness on the part of web designers, we can patch up the resulting stupidity with scaling techniques. Check out Andy Hertzfeld's Eazel [eazel.com] project and you will see that somebody out there is actually thinking about this.
--
Re:Resolution Independent GUI (Score:2)
RISC OS used to have (or still has, I haven't checked it recently) something like this:
To applications, a standard (very large) resolution is presented. Eg, as an application writer you can simply assume the desktop is 1048576x768000. Then, the GUI 'translates' this to the actual screen resolution when the windows are drawn.
This is an oversimplification, but you get the general idea. It works great to make applications run on all sorts of desktops - the app writer doesn't need to worry about it, (s)he knows that on higher resolutions, it will just look sharper but the size will be the same.
Re:Dead pixels (Score:3)
Dead pixels (Score:3)
Every manufacturer sets tolerances for how many dead pixels are acceptable. What percentage would be acceptable to you? 1% of 1600x1200 pixels is a lot different than 1% of 1024x768.
The cost of manufacture must be very high no matter what. A bad TFT screen cannot be fixed -- it has to be tossed in the trash. I am thankful that my Thinkpad's 1024x768 screen has no dead pixels, but I am dreading the thought of my next laptop purchase. In my opinion, 1 bad pixel is one too many. It's a shame that none of the manufacturers feel the same way.
Hrmmm (Score:2)
Re:Textbooks and UXGA screens (Score:4)
Imagine dropping a textbook on the floor. You pick it up, find your page, and continue reading. Now imagine dropping your laptop...
The Importance of Resolution (Score:4)
Business Guy 1: So then accounts puts out this spreadsheet of quarterly projected earnings, and they don't even bother to break it down into multiple sheets! I'm scrolling all over the place looking at it!
Business Guy 2: Really? Cause on my new laptop with 1600x1200 resolution, I was able to view the whole thing on one page.
Guy1: Well, that's great, but I bet it took forever to load with that 1 Meg video card your laptop has in it. Mine, on the other hand, has a full 4 Meg of video memory, plus 256 Meg of RAM. I can load the Powerpoint Org Chart presentation in no time!
Guy2: Too bad you've got that 2 Gig hard drive in there. Mine, on the other hand, has a full 10 Gig, not counting the extra 6 Gig drive I can put in my expansion bay.
I'm only half kidding here; I've actually seen scenes similar to this. It's actually pretty funny to watch two 40+ mid-level managers have a pissing contest to see who the CEO likes best.
Re:The market is lopsided. (Score:2)
-B
What you need is... (Score:2)
Check it out [linpro.no]
Re:Call the eye doctor. (Score:2)
Surely you just answered your own question. For a lot of work, 1024x768 (or worse, 800x600) just restricts and holds back the user. Having the ability to display more on screen allows more tools to be visible, and more of the work being done to be visible. Examples are CAD, WYSIWYG DTP, object modelling, business process design/documentation, etc. That's just the graphical things.
When I am coding I want to be able to see 100 chars width of code, a code/project browser (for quicker navigation between files) and ideally some documentation on the language/APIs/etc on-screen at the same time.
When I am generally playing around (at home) I want to see my mud window, my IRC window, my web browser, my email and usually a command line at the same time on screen.
So yeah, 1600x1200 is a nice thing, and I approve.
~Cederic
icons on web pages (Score:3)
Isn't it about time more browsers had this? Are there any plans for Mozilla [mozilla.org] to include this functionality?
With difference between the top end and bottom end of display technology, and the tendancy of (less skilled?) web designers to create "best viewed in NxN" sites, html viewing software neads to be deisgned to cope with these differences.
Thad