Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"We need a digital camera that can be switched on and fire off that first shot fast. It's not a commonly tracked statistic on any review site, and nobody seems to have this information for every camera. We were hoping other readers could inform us as to what small digital cameras can fire off their first pics in under a second (ideally under half a second). It needs to be small, but mostly, just really quick in operation. Thanks!"
Wow there is some misinformation floating around on these comments. 92% is not what makes this monitor special. As posted prior Dell just refreshed the 2407WFP HC so if that is all you want save $400. What seperates this monitor are two things:
1) The 10bit internal LUT. This is a feature you don't normally see on a sub $1400 panel. I think the next one up that has it is the NEC 2490.
2) Its an IPS penal judging by the viewing angles and no one would put an internal LUT on a PVA/MVA/TN panel. That would be like putting chrome wheels on a Yaris.
Nothing else in the $1000 price point offers LUT & IPS. Assuming the quality is good this could be a killer panel and may force NEC to drop its prices.
BlakkJakk:
1.) The Eizo Flexscan S2111/S2411-panels are S-PVA's with 10 bit LUT's... And the S2111 can be found for $600-$700 so there goes your theory.
2.) There exists no 24 inch S-IPS panel with a 1000:1 contrast ratio so I guess Sony's new isn't an IPS... And we should be lucky for that considering the image persistance problems on overdriven S-IPS panels..
Looking at the specs I think it is either a S-PVA or a the new A-MVA panel from AUO, the same used by BenQ and LG in some of their 24 inch monitors, the specs are identical... except for the color gamut but they could have used new tubes for the back lighting.
But I agree that that the 92% color gamut is useless for a general user since essentially all content (UI's, pictures, games etc) are scaled for sRGB anyway so you will not see the new colors, except for some slightly better greens!