1280x1024 for 4:3 ratio and 1680x1050 for 16:10 ratio and 1920x1200 for 24" 16:10 ratio.
these are a steal indeed, but they almost for sure will be really poor TN panels, which really dont suit any kind of creative professional, but then again, these are targeted for people on the cheap for business, people who basically only use MS Word or spreadsheets in the office and the occasional facebook if its not blocked.
for what your paying, these arent BAD, but you could do much better. i bought myself a week ago a nice 24" LG 246WP-BN monitor with a P-MVA panel for $349.99.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
nik @ May 6th 2008 2:45PM
All this info and they don't even tell us what the resolution is? Isn't that on of the most important things?
helloUser @ May 6th 2008 2:59PM
Expect standard resolutions:
1280x1024 for 4:3 ratio and 1680x1050 for 16:10 ratio and 1920x1200 for 24" 16:10 ratio.
these are a steal indeed, but they almost for sure will be really poor TN panels, which really dont suit any kind of creative professional, but then again, these are targeted for people on the cheap for business, people who basically only use MS Word or spreadsheets in the office and the occasional facebook if its not blocked.
for what your paying, these arent BAD, but you could do much better. i bought myself a week ago a nice 24" LG 246WP-BN monitor with a P-MVA panel for $349.99.
Top that.
wyatt @ May 6th 2008 3:44PM
can anybody point me to a resource where I can find out what monitors are TN, IPS, MVA, etc? seems like a crapshoot.
Pochi @ May 6th 2008 4:15PM
"Top that."
I can hit my LS201 with a hammer.
I wouldn't, but, seriously. I COULD.
Eric @ May 7th 2008 1:00PM
You can lookup LCDs at
http://www.tftcentral.co.uk/panelsearch.htm
It's linked from the wikipedia page
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thin_film_transistor_liquid_crystal_display