PrinceXizor
Platinum Member
- Oct 4, 2002
- 2,188
- 99
- 91
*sheepishly looks around*
SiS 315-64
*runs away in shame*
P.S. NO I did not choose that myself....
SiS 315-64
*runs away in shame*
P.S. NO I did not choose that myself....
Originally posted by: oseven
I understand this can be like opening a can of worms, but should you (even) consider buying a non-DVI monitor?
Originally posted by: eeric
http://www.engadget.com/2006/10/11/dell...207wfp-20-inch-lcd-for-the-budget-set/
I'm guessing TN panel? I was just looking forward to ordering a 2007WFP (not FPW to me ) but just saw this new Dell budget 20" wide. Makes sense to be TN with lower price and faster response rate. Discuss.
Originally posted by: acegazda
Should we bump it back up in the mean time?
Could we discuss a little on the topic of cheap (price, not quality) 20" widescreens? There seems to be an explosion of interest and there are many choices. Looking @ benq, samsung, dell, viewsonic, chemei, etc.
Originally posted by: AnotherGuy
Since the HD-DVD and BluRay gets more affordable everyday... a "gaming LCD with HDCP-Ready" guide would be more than welcomed ..... just an observation
Originally posted by: oseven
I understand this can be like opening a can of worms, but should you (even) consider buying a non-DVI monitor?
Originally posted by: eeric
http://www.engadget.com/2006/10/11/dell...207wfp-20-inch-lcd-for-the-budget-set/
I'm guessing TN panel? I was just looking forward to ordering a 2007WFP (not FPW to me ) but just saw this new Dell budget 20" wide. Makes sense to be TN with lower price and faster response rate. Discuss.
Originally posted by: xtknight
Some rules of thumb that apply to most LCDs: if it's 19" or under, it dithers. If it's 20" and above and it has viewing angles of 176 or 178, it's true 8-bit, or otherwise, it dithers. I can't think of any exceptions off the top of my head for the 20" rule, but there are some 8-bit 19" LCDs (just not any that are that decent).
Originally posted by: errto
I recently bought an HP f2105 for my Mac Pro. It seemed quite promising but the display of text is utterly horrid. Text is sort of blurry, with letters having uneven thickness, weird discoloration happening around certain character combinations, etc. I have noticed this most prominently in web browsing with Safari or Firefox but it seems fairly widespread across all applications.
I am using the native resolution of 1680x1050. I tried playing with the font smoothing preferences but that didn't seem to have any visible effect other than to let me disable anti-aliasing entirely for smaller fonts, which at least makes them readable but is kind of ugly. I also tried connecting the monitor in VGA mode instead of DVI and again, no difference that I can really detect.
I also found the .icm file on the shipped CD and used that as my ColorSync profile. The actual software on the CD was windows-only so couldn't use it.
I'm thinking of returning this and buying another. My main questions are:
- is there any chance this is a problem with the unit and not the model as a whole?
- are there any other tweaks I'm not thinking of?
- what other monitors in the same approximate price range (US$500 or less) might be be a better bet? So far the best candidate appears to be the Samsung SyncMaster 215TW but I'm open to just about anything.
Originally posted by: niall
Originally posted by: xtknight
Some rules of thumb that apply to most LCDs: if it's 19" or under, it dithers. If it's 20" and above and it has viewing angles of 176 or 178, it's true 8-bit, or otherwise, it dithers. I can't think of any exceptions off the top of my head for the 20" rule, but there are some 8-bit 19" LCDs (just not any that are that decent).
So, that means that the Viewsonic VP930B is P-MVA but 6-bit then? With the overdrive and all? One place may have mentioned 8-bit, but it clearly states the standard 160/160 viewing angles everywhere. 8-bit is now far less important than non-TN.
I'm really leaning towards it; good price locally, I want to get away from TN technology for the colour specs and viewing angles, its overdrive tech seems under very good control (I like flat response time lines!), and as gaming is only accessory, any possible ghosting problems are of minimal value. Are there still many "X problems" with current units though?
And is backlighting still a major issue, as seems to be with the other Viewsonic of renown, the VX2025WM? Locally I can find the latter for $10 more, but I'm not into bigger size just because it's bigger. It's what it does that counts.
Originally posted by: KevinC
but it's not listed under the GAMING (better color, decent speed)
section. Would this still be good for gaming?
Originally posted by: xtknight
I added an "HDCP compliance" item to each LCD recommendation based on the info that is known now. The value-oriented LG L204WT supports HDCP (even some of their 19" widescreens do).
Originally posted by: crazy4life
Does anybody have any info on the sceptre x22wg? What are you guy's thoughts
http://www.sceptre.com/Products/LCD/Specifications/spec_x22wg_NagaP.htm
Originally posted by: crazy4life
Well im not worried about viewing angle at all. I just want a monitor that is free of ghosting for gaming and is decent for watching movies for around 300$. I am willing to go down to a 20inch WS but would really like thous extra 2 inches.
Originally posted by: Fanon
Does anyone have a word on the Samsung 205BW? Judging from NewEgg's comments, it looks to be decent.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?Item=N82E16824001081
Originally posted by: xtknight
The main thing I've heard about this LCD is that it has a lot of backlight bleeding. I would get the Dell 2007WFP instead. It is $50 more, but that's a '$50 more' well spent. It's a giant step in quality (I would say the Dell is 50% better overall, not just 50/300=16% better as the price indicates). The Dell has better color reproduction, contrast, viewing angle, more input flexibility, and possibly superior response time. Not to mention it's likely more uniform and has a better black level.