Behind the Numbers: LCD vs. CRT 290
OrenWolf writes "CNet has an article discussing the difference between CRT's and LCD's - where they've been, where they're going, and what to look for when buying one. They inclde information on how to judge the most important (and most overlooked) features in LCD's, the rise/fall of pixels, something that keeps most gamers away from them." Good
summary type piece, although nothing exceptional for the more hardcore techie.
Everytime (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Everytime (Score:2, Interesting)
LCD are nice but feels like a tech being push hard against its limits to do the task.
Re:Everytime (Score:2)
how is that possible? all the lcd's I've seen and used were flat as can be. I have 4 sgi 1600sw's (2 in dual head at work and 2 in the same config at home) and I assure you, they're quite flat.
Re:Everytime (Score:4, Informative)
how is that possible? Check out http://www.uniax.com/ [uniax.com]. They use Flash for nav so I can't give a direct link, but click on "how it works" and then check out either the FAQ or the OLED section. It's pretty cool...
Also check out this site [wave-report.com] for more info on OLEDs.
Karma whore I am...
Re:Everytime (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Everytime (Score:2)
Re:Everytime (Score:2)
Re:Everytime (Score:2)
Re:Everytime (Score:2)
Don't be holding your breath........ (Score:2)
Unless you feel like replacing your screen on a monthly basis
And the difference is (Score:2)
about $200.
Re:And the difference is (Score:2)
Maybe on the low-end, but on the high-end it's more like $2000. And that's the major reason I've stayed away from LCDs, to get one good enough that I would even start to consider replacing any of my Viewsonic CRTs with it would be prohibativly expensive.
Re:And the difference is (Score:2)
Recent LCD experience (Score:3, Interesting)
Ideal conditions? (Score:2)
Kind of like the area that I share with my cube friends.. No splitters but monitors everywhere.
Far from the "ideal" conditions that I doubt anyone really has.
My Next Monitor (Score:2)
Re:My Next Monitor (Score:2, Informative)
If it's a Sony, and it's BIG, it's probably worth it. Otherwise, recycle.
Re:My Next Monitor (Score:2, Informative)
I wouldn't recommend this. At least not yet. Granted I don't know alot about plasma technology, but we recently got a shipment at work for a new exhibit. Mostly showing Flash animations, mixed with some video.
Burn In is a major problem. A static image can cause burn-in within 20 minutes. They are great if the image is constantly moving, but I have yet to see a game that doesn't have some sort of static image always on screen.
Re:My Next Monitor - how about a 37.5" LCD? (Score:2)
I work for a company, Rainbow Displays [rainbowdisplays.com], that is making a 37.5" tiled LCD. This was previously covered [slashdot.org] here on
The display resolution is 852x480. This is actually a tiled 3x1 display. Don't expect it in stores soon since we are just starting to get a pilot line (400/month) going.
The pictures of the display on the web site suck. one could say that they are fake and the product is vaporware. Far from it though. While there is still a lot of work to be done, the displays work and are gorgeous to look at.
BTW, a lot of plasma displays I have seen have VGA and DVI inputs.
Re:My Next Monitor (Score:2)
After a couple of those years of being on constantly, I noticed that it was dimmer than before. So dim, in fact, that it was getting nearly impossible to read in ambient daylight.
DejaNews told me that if I were either brave, stupid, or highly skilled, I'd be able to tweak the gain up with a screwdriver. Someone else had mentioned that this would tend to make the focus drift in time. It seemed like a worthwhile pursuit.
These adjustments are on the flyback transformer. If you don't know how to take reasonable safety precautions to prevent electricity from flowing across your heart, don't go near this thing - or anything else inside of a CRT. It will kill you if you give it a chance.
That said, the gain (or bias, or whatever - I don't care) and focus are two little recessed screws. I used a plastic screwdriver to turn them. They're the -only- adjustments on the flyback, which appears as a brick on the end of the dust-covered wire that attaches to the top of the CRT.
Stay away from that wire, too.
And never do anything with the thing plugged in or turned on. Electricity, in the form of high-voltage DC, will leap forth, grab you by the arm, and burn the hair off of your chest before cooking you like a hotdog. See movie, The Green Mile for details.
Having said that, I put the monitor (sans most of its plastic chassis) on a non-conductive surface, turned it on, and started fiddling. I turned the gain/bias/whatever knob up until white (#FFFFFF) was blooming a bit on-screen, and then turned the contrast down on the front panel to compensate. The idea being that, if it turned darker in the next year or so, I'd be able to avoid cracking it open again, and instead just push a button on the front panel.
I also made the focus as dead-on as I could.
Results: It was a joy to use again. All the lovely Trinitron colorspace, still visible when the sun was out. The focus was sharper than I'd ever remembered it being before.
2 or 3 years later, the monitor is still quite bright, with no obvious degradation. The focus is still razor-like. Still has the colorspace I've always liked. Still hasn't been opened up again.
I'm extremely happy with my dingy Sony Trinitron.
Re:My Next Monitor (Score:2)
Price of CRT vs. LCD (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Price of CRT vs. LCD (Score:4, Informative)
Maybe they have the same viewable area, but most of the times not the maximum resolution. Typically, you can get 1280x1024 in a 17" CRT, but not more than 1024x768 on a 15" LCD (on a laptop, for instance, the monitor must be SVGA+ our USVGA to achieve more than 1024x768).
Re:Price of CRT vs. LCD (Score:2)
I once saw a 15" Compaq (model 2710US) on Circuity City, where it was claimed to support up to 1600x1200 too. But that was the virtual resolution (i.e., the winblows desktop would have that resolution, but physically it would still be 1024x768, and you would need to scroll the screen to reach the full resolution).
Re:Price of CRT vs. LCD (Score:2)
Re:Price of CRT vs. LCD (Score:2)
As the winblows driver didn't support it neither, I didn't bother to try to get it working on X.
the order of importance (Score:2, Insightful)
Dimensions, Refresh rate, Colors, Response time, and Power consumption.
While I would agree these are all important, why are response time and refresh rate not linked together? I.E., a crappy refresh rate (50Hz) combined with a crappy response rate (60 ms) could possibly lead to trouble. Also missing are contrast and brightness, two more very important aspects.
I dunno (Score:2, Insightful)
Tom's Hardware has an excellent comparison (Score:5, Informative)
He also has a recent roundup of the current LCD players [tomshardware.com] and what to look for.
C.
all i know is that LCDs are much less fun (Score:4, Funny)
note: use extreme caution and some common sense when throwing anything from a rooftop.
Why I wont buy a LCD for a long time. (Score:3, Insightful)
LCD's are pretty to look at, that's about it. None of them can match the refresh rate of a CRT. (Yes I know LCD's don't really do vertical scan like CRT's do, but most LCD's sample the analog verticle refresh at 60hz then coverts it to digital unless it has a digital interface to begin with)
If you really want to reduce eye strain, or just simply get work done, a bigger monitor with a high refresh rate (120HZ+)
Size and refresh rate are the two most important things for me when I purchase a monitor. I don't care if I can hang it on a wall or off my ass. Unless you absolutely need it to be portable, you're better off using a CRT.
Re:Why I wont buy a LCD for a long time. (Score:4, Insightful)
The other problem with CRTs which causes eyestrain is movement. Display a web page on a CRT, then look at a glyph under a magnifying glass. The glyph will be shaking slightly. Even the best CRTs do this, because the scanning process has some inherent inaccuracy. This problem does not affect LCDs. The pixels on an LCD are mechnically fixed and cannot move. When using a digital LCD, there are no PLLs and amplifiers to distort the signal.
The combination of these two things means LCDs cause much less eyestrain than CRTs.
LCDs don't yield eyestrain due to refresh rates (Score:2)
I've long had problems with monitor flicker, even 85 Hz refresh. (I like having both high refresh and high resolution so I never really did the 120Hz thing...) I haven't had any problems with refresh since getting a LCD.
Your point about larger screen size reducing eyestrain remains relevant with LCDs however.
--LP
Re:Why I wont buy a LCD for a long time. (Score:3, Insightful)
A few years back, my CEO's wife said, "We should replace all our monitors with LCD flatscreens to make the whole company look high tech to investors" Eventually that kind of free spending drove the company into the ground.
That has nothing to do with the viability of LCDs and everything to do with the stupidity of the CEO and the financial acumen of the spending department of your company.
LCD's are pretty to look at, that's about it. None of them can match the refresh rate of a CRT. (Yes I know LCD's don't really do vertical scan like CRT's do, but most LCD's sample the analog verticle refresh at 60hz then coverts it to digital unless it has a digital interface to begin with)
Well, you said it yourself. Get a digital LCD with a digital interface. That should slaughter the refresh of just about *any* CRT. There's no flicker at all, even though the refresh is only '35' Hz, it's refreshing the whole screen 35 times a second, instead of scanning a single row of pixels 75 times a second.
Of course personal preference rules, and if you prefer a CRT to an LCD, that's your choice.
If you really want to reduce eye strain, or just simply get work done, a bigger monitor with a high refresh rate (120HZ+)
Of course, to be fair, a monitor that can do 120Hz refresh is equivalent to an LCD screen that has 160 degree viewing angle and digital input, IE, not cheapo.
Size and refresh rate are the two most important things for me when I purchase a monitor. I don't care if I can hang it on a wall or off my ass. Unless you absolutely need it to be portable, you're better off using a CRT.
Barring the lone Sony 24" (viewable 22.5"), LCDs are bigger, with Apple selling a 22" and 23" (22" and 23" viewable), with IBM, Samsung, and Philips offering similar sizes.
Refresh rate is personal, but from my eye, an LCD with a 40Hz refresh beats everything I've seen short of a CRT set at 90Hz; but again, that's personal preference. If I were to choose between a Sony Trinitron vs a 17" cheapo LCD, the Trinitron wins. If I were comparing a 21" Goldstar with a 17" Apple LCD, the Apple LCD wins. Design quality means something too.
Re:Why I wont buy a LCD for a long time. (Score:2)
My father runs an ad agency on Macs. When they bought some new G4s, they went out and bought some Sony professional CRTs, not the Apple LCD displays. Why? Price really wasn't an issue; they'll make far more money off these machines than they could ever spend on them, but it was simply that the high-end CRTs are exactly what they need. No need to be flashy and try to impress people with some funky flat LCD, just get some professional monitors that work well.
Also, LCDs develop burn-in rather quickly (24 hours or less, iirc) and expensive CRTs(though still cheaper than LCDs) won't burn in for months. They have an automated network backup system that powers down the computers every night, so they leave them running every night from whenever they leave to go home till about 9pm. I'm not saying LCDs are bad, I just wouldn't buy one for a workhorse computer or a gaming machine. Too expensive, and I'd get better results with a CRT.
Re:Why I wont buy a LCD for a long time. (Score:2)
CRTs have moire, convergence, focus, and alignment 'issues'.
LCDs have viewing angle-color shifting and refresh speed 'issues'.
CRTs can cause headaches for some people.
LCDs ghost too much for some people.
LCDs are too expensive, and CRTs are to heavy/bulky.
You can't weld a CRT to a laptop, as an example
I agree. (Score:2)
This is the nice thing about CRT's--they look good over a wide range of resolutions. On my MAG DX1795 monitor at home, I run 1024x768 @ 75 Hz, though I can in a pinch run 1152x864 @ 70 Hz if I need to see larger images.
Today's really good 19" monitors from Sony, NEC, Idek Iilyama and Viewsonic can display all the way up to 1600x1200 @ 85 Hz very cleanly, though at 1600x1200 resolution objects on screen are displayed a bit too small for my taste.
"Graphics designer would not touch a LCD" -- BS (Score:2, Informative)
Re:"Graphics designer would not touch a LCD" -- BS (Score:5, Informative)
BTW, the stated viewing angle on these is 170 deg, and they darn well mean it. Comparing (e.g.) a laptop LCD to these is wholly inaccurate -- not all LCD panels are created equal these days.
Anyone know of other displays that have managed to ship with panels of this quality?
Re:"Graphics designer would not touch a LCD" -- BS (Score:2)
Re:"Graphics designer would not touch a LCD" -- BS (Score:2)
Any decent laptop screen is **DESIGNED** to have a narrow viewing angle, so the guy sitting next to you on the plane can't read your document.
Re:"Graphics designer would not touch a LCD" -- BS (Score:2)
Moreover, with laptops becoming a popular home computing system due to small size, portability, and convenience... this has been changing the demographic away from the jet-setting to the couch-sitting. I've had friends in the former category actually complain about the wide viewing angle on newer laptops for just the privacy reason you mention. The usual solution is an add-on privacy screen that replicates the por viewing angle of older LCD panels... 8-)
Good LCDs? (Score:2)
I've just found the 18.1" NEC 1850x [necmitsubishi.com] which supposedly has a refresh rate of 15ms from black to white and white to black, but am uncertain if this is "real" anyone seen any reviews? From what I've read this would make a good gaming LCD monitor. Though I must say the $1300 pricetag is a kick in the wallet.
Anyone found any new technology that will make us wish for something other then LCDs? I've seen all the articles about the different process technology for LCDs, but nothing exciting.
Anyone seen DLP [dlp.com] flatscreen monitors? DLP seems to do everything you want, they make kick ass tvs.
Poll Suggestion (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Poll Suggestion (Score:2)
If finances permit, I'm planning to replace it with the new Apple Cinema HD display (1920x1200 resolution). A shade expensive at $3,500.
I love the LCD monitors because they have incredibly sharp text, and as you probably know most geeks spend more time looking at text than pictures. High ext sharpness reduces fatigue and eyestrain significantly, making the LCD well worth the extra bucks.
Re:Poll Suggestion (Score:2)
D
Re:Poll Suggestion (Score:2)
Re:Poll Suggestion (Score:2)
At work...usually a 17" generic CRT at 800x600, 85hz (damn cheap embedded video systems...ow, my head...
On most monitors, I have to have the brightness/contrast maxed out, unless it's a brand-new high-quality screen. Dark monitors also give me headaches.
I detest LCD screens. I have never seen one I would consider using except on a laptop or somewhere else where portability was essential. Every LCD I've looked at (even the really good ones) has annoying color shifts as I change my viewing angle, fuzzy screens, poor motion display, and are usually far too dim and faded for me to use for extended periods. Not to mention the fact that they're usually "best viewed at" some ungodly high resolution that I can't see with or without my glasses (said glasses make a 17" screen appear about 13-14"...
DennyK
Re:Poll Suggestion (Score:2)
Re:Poll Suggestion (Score:2)
for those curious how LCDs *really* work (Score:2)
Their display used to have the unique advantage of a very low pixel response rate, great for avoiding ghosting in video, but I can't seem to confirm that in their specs nowdays.
--LP
Re:for those curious how LCDs *really* work (Score:2)
It does have a very fast pixel response; I can send my mouse on long voyages to the mysterious worlds on the right of the screen, and it never seems to echo.
I like it a lot but want to get the Apple Cinema Display HD thanks to the huge number of pixels it has and the physically much larger screen. Curiously, it claims excellent pixel response, but for some reason the spec doesn't give figures - anyone know what it is? (List for either the plain Cinema Display or the new HD).
What does seem odd is that Apple's specs put it in the middle of the pack for LCD screens per the c|net article, but when I actually use an Apple Cinema Display, it seems brighter than anything out there. So either the article's wrong or Apple is quite a bit more conservative in its specs than one might think.
D
LCD's are horrible for photographs (Score:5, Interesting)
1. JPEG compression is terribly magnified on an LCD. look at a typical Yahoo News press photo on an LCD and then on a CRT, especially close ups of people.
2. Contrast is variable from top to bottom while looking dead center: On my recent model VAIO laptop, when looking at the screen from dead center, the top is too dark, the bottom is too bright. (in terms of black level)
3. Colors shift depending on left to right viewing angle, and typically subtle hues of red and blues and purples will not appear as pleasing and natural as they do on a CRT.
4. Overall gamma is poor, with the falloff happening in all the wrong places, which wrecks havok on portraits and figure photography. (which means yes, pr0n!)
So it's interesting to note that on a recent visit to Vertis studios in San Francisco, the people who often do the Macy's catalogs, that each digital photography station consisted of a high end scanning back camera and a macintosh with a 22" LCD monitor! I mentioned this to one of the supervisors and he said "Yea...we're aware of the problems with LCD...we carefully calibrate them and make sure to stare at them dead center, or we get the color shift problem left to right." I figured that someone had sold them on those setups purely for the 'cool' value, and they fell for it hook line and sinker.
He then took me into the finishing room, where, to my pleasure, there were several workstations outfitted with high end CRT monitors with hoods around them. I knew there was no way they were doing catalog work without CRT's, given the pickiness of fashion retailers over the color accuracy in the catalogs.
When I was working at Digital Domain in Hollywood, as well as every other VFX company I've ever worked for, there was nigh an LCD in sight, because you can't do critical adjustment on an LCD.
Despite all this doom and gloom, it IS getting better all the time, and eventually, unless it's replaced by DLP or other "every pixel is a tube" flatscreen technology, then I'll be calibrating my photographs for viewing on LCD, because that's what everyone will have. Until then, I prefer my high end Sony FD trinitron above all else.
--Mike
Re:LCD's are horrible for photographs (Score:5, Insightful)
JPEG is lossy compression and always has had artifacting. Because you've never seen it before says more about the blurry monitors you're used to than anything else.
Re:LCD's are horrible for photographs (Score:3, Insightful)
I have wondered though if professional digital photographers will start a demand for tiny CRT monitors. Think of a 5" CRT that can do fairly high resolutions... Just a pipe dream and probably the degree of percision required to get a good picture at high resolution on a CRT plus the market size would make it a no go for any sane person.
But it would be interesting...
LCDs nice for video but Your Codec Milage May Vary (Score:2)
Absolutely. I watch my old DivX encoded B5 episodes on an LCD, as well as my current crop of Enterprise MPEG4 encoded episodes, and on the 18.1" LCD you do see the artifacts (though it is quite watchable from typical TV viewing distance).
Watch the same videos on a CRT and most of the artifacts go away
Do the same thing with MJPEG or raw ieee1394 on the other hand, and the LCD, sans the glare of the CRT, looks much better. No flicker, no glare, just crisp, clear, beautiful video. And for viewing DVDs
And on my 4x3 18.1" ViewSonic I've not been able to create scaling or motion artifacts (though on a colleagues 16:10 SGI Flatpanel they are regrettebly there, in the form of ugly horizontal lines about 1/4 inch long, that go away if a max screened xine is moved one or two pixels to the right. Most odd.)
Re:LCD's are horrible for photographs (Score:2)
thad
square pixels are bad? why? (Score:2)
Re:square pixels are bad? why? (Score:2)
The problem remains, though, between matching up the square pixels of high-end digital cameras and non-square pixels of displays (whether round or rectangular).
I'm also not sure the previously-mentioned ability to better see the compression artifacts on jpeg's is a 'problem' with LCDs - is this perhaps instead a sign of a better display (at least in that respect?). Those things are usually obvious to me (same with those damn dampening wires). I'd just as soon use a better file format where the problem is reduced (wavelets, anyone?).
Re:LCD's are horrible for photographs (Score:5, Insightful)
"The current generation of LCD displays are terrible for viewing photographs. The square pixels and variable contrast makes for a number of bad artifacts:"
I suspect the problems have as much to do with software being optimized for CRTs as much as real problems with LCDs.
"1. JPEG compression is terribly magnified on an LCD. look at a typical Yahoo News press photo on an LCD and then on a CRT, especially close ups of people."
I would argue that this actually says more about the visual clarity of the LCD, in being able to pick up the artifacts that CRTs blur away.
It's akin to claiming that certain brands of cameras with extra high speed film and extremely good lenses are bad for taking portraits because all of the makeup, flaws, and blemishes show up in the photographs, and that it's better to use a slower film and a less precise lens.
"2. Contrast is variable from top to bottom while looking dead center: On my recent model VAIO laptop, when looking at the screen from dead center, the top is too dark, the bottom is too bright. (in terms of black level)"
It is certainly true that CRTs have a wider viewing angle and more uniform color because each pixel is more like a point light source that radiates in a sphere, where an LCD pixel is a cone of light. Newer LCDs, like Apple 15" and 23" LCDs, have much better contrast ratio, 350:1, better viewing angle, 160 degrees in either dimension, and better brightness, at 200 nits, than their older 22" LCD;300:1 and 180 nits. I can't google anything about the VAIO laptops, but it's not uncommon for, say, a ViewSonic 17" LCD to hit 220 nits and a 300:1 contrast ratio; brighter and more evenly lit, but not nearly as black.
"3. Colors shift depending on left to right viewing angle, and typically subtle hues of red and blues and purples will not appear as pleasing and natural as they do on a CRT."
This does have something to do with the viewing angle; as per the 'pleasing or natural bit', that's about color optimization, I believe. LCDs have a different gamut and visual quality than a CRT, and if the software doesn't take that into account, that's like having overhead flourescent lights on a CRT without a hood!
"4. Overall gamma is poor, with the falloff happening in all the wrong places, which wrecks havok on portraits and figure photography. (which means yes, pr0n!)"
Can't speak for that, you may be right about the gamma.
"So it's interesting to note that on a recent visit to Vertis studios in San Francisco, the people who often do the Macy's catalogs, that each digital photography station consisted of a high end scanning back camera and a macintosh with a 22" LCD monitor! I mentioned this to one of the supervisors and he said "Yea...we're aware of the problems with LCD...we carefully calibrate them and make sure to stare at them dead center, or we get the color shift problem left to right." I figured that someone had sold them on those setups purely for the 'cool' value, and they fell for it hook line and sinker."
No, there are real reasons to use a LCD over a CRT, more than just 'cool' value.
Size, energy output, eyestrain-flicker, digital precision (digital input to digital output, consistent guaranteed visual quality across all LCDs if gamut and color space are taken into account, etc), and visual precision (no convergence, alignment, moire, or focus problems).
LCDs suffer from different problems entirely; instead of moire, convergence, focus, or alignment problems, they suffer from narrower visual focus, and lower contrast ratio and brightness. In fact, LCDs are *much* sharper than just about any CRT because there is no alignment, no convergence, no focus problems because there's no reliance on three electron guns aimed at a phosphor coated screen.
You also have the issue that CRTs aren't linear, where an LCD can be made so. CRT electron guns are nonlinear devices between the 0 and 1 signals, while an LCD's ramp between the totally off and totally on signal *is* linear; I'm talking about the value of Red0-Red255, or Blue0-Blue255, or Green0-Green255.
Then there's refresh. CRTs must refresh a line at a time, where LCDs refresh the whole screen at once; less headache, less flicker, less eyestrain.
"He then took me into the finishing room, where, to my pleasure, there were several workstations outfitted with high end CRT monitors with hoods around them. I knew there was no way they were doing catalog work without CRT's, given the pickiness of fashion retailers over the color accuracy in the catalogs."
This will change when designers and fashion retailers start using LCDs; then when you have digital images end to end, you can start seeing more focus on better compression algorithms (ne horrible JPEG artefacting), better gamma and gamut and color space taking advantage of the fact that LCDs have linear color response and deterministic color response.
"When I was working at Digital Domain in Hollywood, as well as every other VFX company I've ever worked for, there was nigh an LCD in sight, because you can't do critical adjustment on an LCD."
You couldn't do it, doesn't mean you can't. There are problems right now, but doesn't mean there also aren't advantages.
"Despite all this doom and gloom, it IS getting better all the time, and eventually, unless it's replaced by DLP or other "every pixel is a tube" flatscreen technology, then I'll be calibrating my photographs for viewing on LCD, because that's what everyone will have. Until then, I prefer my high end Sony FD trinitron above all else."
Yeah, new technologies and software (such as Apple going all LCD) should help a lot.
Re:LCD's are horrible for photographs (Score:2)
By analogy, a CRT is a scanning beam of electrons, so you have to sweep across the row of pixels one pixel at a time, and then across the screen one row at a time, like a car driving across a parking lot trying to hit every parking space.
I don't know a better way to explain an LCD; the LCD *is* a frame buffer, or like ram, and yes, you do have to transfer data, but that's not any different than transferring data from SDRAM to L3 cache to L2 cache to VRAM or whatever; there's a bus, maybe 8 bits wide, running at 100MHz, meaning in one second you can send 100MB of data; a 1024*768 screen with 3 bytes per pixel refreshed 40 times a second == 120*1024*768 bytes, or 120*768KB, or 92160KB or roughly ~90MB of data per second. Or you can have a bus 32 bits wide running at 25MHz; the point being that the LCD screen's data bus is much, much, higher than any CRT signal's.
Re:LCD's are horrible for photographs (Score:2)
An LCD doesn't fade to black when it's not being refreshed; it stays at the old value until it's been changed, and then it just changes to the new value.
So that means if you have a CRT refreshing at 75Hz, each pixel is touched 75 times a second; the minute you touch a pixel, it has 1/75 of a second to fade to black. If you're running at 80Hz, you have 1/80 of a second, so it fades less. If you're running at 90Hz, you get 1/90 of a second...
Whereas in an LCD, you may only refresh at 40Hz, but you never ever fade to black, so there's no flicker.
Re:LCD's are horrible for photographs (Score:2)
The only reason I would switch.. (Score:2, Funny)
Not to mention the huge amount of heat CRTs put out! In my old apartment, my gas went out (ok, I didn't pay the bill :P), but my computer room was always toasty warm with 3 CRTs going. You haven't lived, till you've used a Mac SE for a foot-warming ottoman!
Question about Graphic Artists?? (Score:2)
But wouldn't SGI reject the LCD monitors due to color quality? What's the story there? Are the SGI monitors better than PC flat panels?
Re:Question about Graphic Artists?? (Score:4, Interesting)
Still won't go with Flatpanels... (Score:2)
Truly, I didn't see any hint of ghosting effect, and the absence of refresh is nice to know, but has no visual impact. The idea that the signal is kept digital logner doesn't make a damn bit of difference to me, but the more precise usage of the visible screen does.
However, the thing still looked bad in terms of color and brightness. On smaller LCDs the field of vision is pretty good, but when you have something the size of a Cinema display, looking at any particular part of the screen makes the portions away from focus really dark. While LCD tech has drastically improved, it doesn't seem to scale well at close distances (my subjective experience). I have never seen an LCD with an adequate viewable angle. Now OLEDs may become what LCD should have been. LCDs are certainly not worth the extra cash, but an OLED display might be more tempting, all the pluses of LCD with none of the disadvantages...
I'm a Gamer who's happy with an LCD (Score:2)
My main monitor is a 17" HP F70 LCD; it is sharp, brilliant, fast, and clear at 1280x1024. I play StartFleet Command, Wizardry 8, Heroes of Might & Magic IV, Destroyer Command, and Combat Flight Simulator with no problems at all.
Of course, I could have bought three nice 19" CRTs for the same price, but the CRTs would have continued to give me a headache, I suspect. My eyes don't twitch after 12 hours of coding on the LCD... and that's worth something.
My advice -- stay away from cheap LCDs and the bargain 15-inchers. You get what you pay for...
Magnets, electrons, what's the difference (Score:2)
No, LCD's use electric fields. CRT's use magnetic fields to focus and scan the beams. Why do tech-oriented mags hire technical idiots?
Look at the facts LCDs vs Monitors (Score:2)
Pros:
weight
Cons:
Pixel Burnouts
Ghosting
Price
Viewable Angles
Native resolutions
Monitors
Pros:
Cost
Picture Quality is Better
DVD & Movie playback (No ghosting)
Ajustable Refresh (its not a con, when its selectable!)
Ajustable resolutions
Cons:
Size
Humm, Ill stick with my 22 inch flat screen monitor which is perfect. Ill use a LCD for when space is tight, thats it.
Re:Look at the facts LCDs vs Monitors (Score:3, Informative)
Power consumption
Digital interface
Sub-pixel text rendering
More CRT cons:
Power consumption
Power supply & amp failure
Analog interface
Focus
Convergence
Radiation
Seriously, I have sitting right here on the desk with me the Sony GDM-F500R, still the best monitor Sony makes, and a Samsung SyncMaster 210T, both running at 1600x1200. There is no contest. I can stare at source code continuously with the Samsung (thanks to the sub-pixel rendered text, the horizontal resolution is 300dpi), but with the Sony I need to take breaks. Focus and convergence on the Sony are worse in proportion to the distance from the center of the screen. The Sony needs to go to Irvine, CA (100lbs shipping cost) for professional adjustment and maintenance every two years or so.
Sure, the CRT has terrific color and response, but that isn't enough to overcome its annoying electro-optical problems.
Re:Look at the facts LCDs vs Monitors (Score:2)
stuck pixels (Score:2, Interesting)
I have exactly four LCD displays. (Score:2)
That's it. For everything else, for now, CRT's are superior. The 19" monitor I'm working on right now displays 1600x1200 crisply, can go higher if I really want to, and yet, can produce 800x600 without artifacting.
Some wrong information in article (Score:3, Insightful)
when purchasing a tube-type (CRT) monitor, "any CRT will do".
I won't bother being graceful here. That's a bunch of crap.
Cheap monitors are junk. The CRT is the major difference between cheap and good-quality monitors. I am typing this on an NEC MultiSync FE950+ which is a beaufiful flat-face CRT monitor. It costs a lot more, but it is worth it. The other two monitors on my desk (a Sun/Sony 20E20 and a Misubishi DiamondTron) are of similar quality. They will last me through several computers...in fact, the Mitsubishi already has.
Re:Some wrong information in article (Score:2)
I think the PC I owned at the time had a mighty AMD 486-100 CPU, and a VESA localbus video card from Orchid. Seven years later it looks even better with a P-III and a GeForce3 driving it. I also have a Micron brand 19" monitor, that came with my Micron brand PC, but it just does not have the sharpness of the Nanao. And the video cable is permanently attached.
My new Inspiron 8100 laptop with Radeon Mobility 7500 (64Mb!) and 15" UXGA+ is the first laptop I have used that is definitely game-ready. The display is fast - really fast (< 25ms up/down cycle). Q3A at 1600x1200x32 is awesome, with only the slightest touch of shearing or smearing. It totally kicks butt.
Re:Some wrong information in article (Score:2)
when purchasing a tube-type (CRT) monitor, "any CRT will do".
I won't bother being graceful here. That's a bunch of crap.
You're right. Try quoting their full statement next time:
"Almost any CRT will do." And then you click on that statement, and they provide more information about what they mean. "Virtually any CRT monitor on the market today will provide a stable, acceptable image for most applications."
Re:Some wrong information in article (Score:2)
Amen! Can I hear another! "Amen!"
I get asked a lot about what computers to buy, what's good, what's bad.
My advice has been consistant for years: spend whatever money it takes to get a good monitor, sacrificing CPU speed, HDD size, or RAM--whatever it takes. You spend all of your time looking at the monitor, and almost none waiting on the computer. Get a good monitor that's big enough to see stuff. Nothing is sadder than to hear some dweeb going on about his P4, 1.9Ghz, 1Gig RAM, and watch him look at the world through a blurry 15in monitor.
I like Trinitrons (those are usually decent), some of the NECs and Hitachis (or RasterOps, which are just rebranded Hitachis).
Spend that cash on a good monitor. You can always carry it over to your next computer, or upgrade your current box. Good monitors (and keyboards, but good keyboards are still cheap) make the computing experience safer and more pleasurable.
Dell Notebook UltraSharp(tm) 15" Monitor 1600x1200 (Score:2)
I went for one of the new UltraSharp (aka Enhanced UXGA) [dell.com] LCD.
Has anyone seen one of these LCDs, or have any comments on their performance?
Re:Dell Notebook UltraSharp(tm) 15" Monitor 1600x1 (Score:2)
I wish I could get it with LOWER resolution though. I'm afraid that 1600x1200 on a 15" monitor is going to kill my eyes. I think this stuff is just designed for Windows, where you are expected to bump the font size up. Oh well, I guess I can start 16 terminal sessions at once.
Re:Dell Notebook UltraSharp(tm) 15" Monitor 1600x1 (Score:2)
Cheap IBM 20.8" 2048x1536 TFT wish (Score:2)
What I wish someone would make is a kit consisting of everything except display module, which one could buy directly from IBM. That is: a plastic housing for the display, a power supply and a video card. The video card needs to be driven by 4 24-bit LVDS transmitter chips, which were $8 each when I looked in it--I think the chip may have beeen the National Semiconductor DS90CF581 [ibm.com]. 4 x $8 = $32 chip cost x 5X markup for retail = $160 additional cost of video card plus cost of two LVDS connectors (using the hokey rule of thumb that I've heard that total electronic component costs are typically 20% of the suggested retail prices of the resulting product).
Without the need to stock the display component, there would not have to have such a big mark up to cover storage, damage, etc. I think the kit without the display could easily cost under $1k.
The video card would be the significant engineering task. The two LVDS streams have to be kept in sync, so you cannot just use two of the LVDS cards that can drive an SGI-1600SW display. It looks like you really do have a make a new video card. The big question that I had not gotten around to researching was whether were was a VGA chip or chip set that could deliver the digital output for two screens without convering the signal to analog,that is deliver two 24-bit parallel streams (the display interface is basically that of two 1024x1536 LVDS flat panels, side by side). There are a number of dual head VGA cards. I just never got around to looking into whether it was possible to get digital output from their chips.
I think that if a kit like this were available, some computer retailers would assemble it and the panels to offer the finished product, and that would reach untapped section of the flat panel market that I think there should be significant deamnd for (a $3k 20.8" TFT for CAD, engineeringing, graphic art, etc.).
One minor drawback that might slightly impede the popularity of this display as it gets closer to the consumer range is that the housing for it is currently not very thin. The housing is about four inches thick, making it a bit less sexy looking from the side than most other flat panels.
Links to ITQX20 vendors (Score:2)
Oops. I meant to links to existing products based on IBM's 20.8" 2048x1536 ITQX20 module. Here they are.
Raintree Systems IN 2080-50 [raintreesystems.com] and National Display's Nova [nationaldisplay.com] have the standard IBM dual LVDS digital inputs. I think there was an outfit in the UK called "Gemini Electonics" that was going to produce a similar device, but I could not find a link to them right now. RealVision has a dual LVDS video card [rvu-inc.com] for driving these monitors, although they promote it more for the electrically identical 6144x1536 grey scale version of the ITQX20. Finally, IBM's T-210 [monitoroutlet.com] apparently uses the ITQX20 module, but only allows analog input, and only at something like 30Hz if you want to full resolution.
I have no financial relationship to any of these vendors.
Some things I've learned (Score:2, Insightful)
1. Uncalibrated monitors are worthless except for texual information. Might as well be black and white. Hardware calibrated is best. Calibrated by eye with test patterns is better than nothing.
2.) Ambient light is key. Correct light is a source behind the monitor (no other sources) that is roughly (no more than) 20% as bright as the light from the monitor, and has the same color temperature. Refresh is key. Incandescent is best, or match the refresh of flourescent to monitor refresh. One of the best ways to get a headache is standard office setup: overhead flourescents oscillating at a different, subliminally perceived, refresh than the monitor's subliminally perceived refresh. And at a different color temperature. At first, you don't notice, but your brain is going "WTF!?! Are you TRYING to hurt me?!?!"
3.) Trinitrons suck. All inline tubes suck. Triads of dots, not stripes, are best for displaying anything not rectilinear and vertical. Trini's are nice and sharp when looking at office buildings; look at curves (or rotate the office building 14.3 degrees) and your res has just dropped through the floor due to aliasing) As Joe Kane (Google it) said, "When I look at a Trinitron, all I see is stripes".
There's LOTS more. but I'm too drunk and tired. But I've calibrated my TV's since 1990 and my monitors since the first 24 bit display hit the market, and my point is, hardware is the least of it. The least. Anyone who knows what they're doing can make a POS display look better than a zillion dollar unobtainium, proof of concept flim-flam, and with a little homework, you can too. The work's all been done for you (and me, I didn't make this shit up, I learned it). Go find it and use it.
Ideal solution... (Score:2)
My last set-up was two 15" CRTs, one of very good quality (ViewSonic G653), and one was crap (PackardBell VGA monitor).
Right now I am running the Apple and the ViewSonic in dual screen. I plan on doing some photo work (nothing too big, but things were I would like to be able to view it on a CRT) and having the nice CRT there, even in a small size, will help out a lot.
Having used dual monitor set-ups for several years now, I cannot imagine not using them. This way I also get the advantages that both screen have to offer.
A few comments... (Score:2)
As many have said, I have also noticed the clarity of an LCD on a digital interface (DVI). Note that running an LCD on an analog interface doesn't really give you the whole picture. The conversion from digital-analog-digital loses some of the clarity.
And on that note, I wish that more LCD manufacturers would make reasonably-priced LCDs with DVI inputs. I've been trying to find an LCD monitor for my wife's machine (which has DVI output) and the only one I could find without going to the higher-end stuff was the HP F50 (15") at $499 (counting the $100 rebate). It shouldn't cost much to put the DVI port on the monitor, and they're becoming much more common on video cards.
And one other note... A room at work where we have about twenty big (19") CRTs was recently converted to LCDs. The temperature of the room dropped almost 10 degrees. They had to go through adjust the ventilation. That many CRTs put out quite a bit of heat.
Milalwi
I love LCDs (Score:2)
No that I'm all LCD I don't think I'd ever go back.
Re:Obligatory Apple Mention (Score:2)
Get yourself a G4 without a monitor. Your monitor is good enough.
Re:Obligatory Apple Mention (Score:2)
Re:Obligatory Apple Mention (Score:2)
Re:Longevity of LCDs (Score:2)
Might not be as bad for the casual user, but to have the brightness and even the color temp change on you as a graphics designer from month to month is a disaster!
Re:Longevity of LCDs (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Longevity of LCDs (Score:2)
I think that could be as short as two years of constant use. I hope I'm wrong
Anyone have more details?
D
Re:LCD Colors? (Score:2, Insightful)
What that something else is depends on the card and the drivers. It can be alpha channel, z-buffer, stencil buffer, accum-buffer, or just wasted in order to get better alignment(and to have a bigger number).
Now, that being said high end graphics cards/workstations will let you have higher color depths, I have seen 30bit(10R 10G 10B, and the other 2 bits used for things like multi sampling) and 64(16R 16B 16G) mentioned, although I have not had the luxury of seeing/using these systems myself.
Kevin
Re:LCD Colors? (Score:4, Informative)
Nope, games (and your windows probably) run at 24-bit colour, 32 bits per pixel, and they simply waste one byte per pixel because it's much faster to access the pixels when aligned on a 4 byte boundary. It's simply a speed thing. Not only this, but from a reflective surface (paper) you can distinguish about 50 million colours (except some women who are reverse colour-blind in having 4 whatsijigs in their eyes instead of 3). On an emittive source (crt,tv, backlit lcd monitor) you can only see about 14 million colours. Note this doesn't apply to reflective lcd monitors such as the game boy colour, but that only does a few thousand colours in the graphics chip anyway
Re:LCD Colors? (Score:2)
ehh, no. The color is RGBA. The last byte is used for the alpha channel (determines the pixel's transparency).
Re:LCD Colors? (Score:2)
Eh no. The last bite in a texture is (well can be) alpha, not on your screen.
Re:I won't go back... (Score:2)
I think they would be okay for a lot of graphics design work, but not photo editing.
Re:LCD's not for graphics designers? Hello Imac.. (Score:2)
Has anybody told Apple that this probably isn't a good idea?
True, though there is always the option of buying an G4 without an Apple-brand LCD and instead opting for a Real Monitor [lacie.com].
Re:Here's my complaint: (Score:2)
They probably read your accompanying description and just found your tone of voice too irritating.