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Monitor One-Upmanship From IBM

openSoar writes: "So here is a solution for your lounge or media room setup and a nice display for your office. 61 inches of plasma sounds sweet but a $28K price tag doesn't. The IBM LCD will do 3840x2400 which would make me SO much more productive ;-)" Who says 200dpi is only for the labs? I'd rather have two of these than one 61" display anyhow. 3840 x 2400 would mate nicely with the Nikon D1x I also don't have.

5 of 137 comments (clear)

  1. Confusing write up. by supine · · Score: 4, Informative

    I thought i was being taken to something about a 61" flat panel for $28,000 but the first link actually takes you to where you can purchase a 22" IBM flat panel for US$16,000. After finding that out, the write up starts to make sense...

    marty

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    "I can't buy want I want because it's free. Can't be what they want because I'm me." -Corduroy, Pearl Jam
  2. QUXGA-W by stuffman64 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Ah yes, the acronyms keep stacking up. Ok, this is how I remeber it: MGA->CGA->EGA->VGA->SVGA->XGA->X SGA->UXGA, now the all-mighty QUXGA-W (I'm sure I missed a few in there, especially the Apple ones). This stands for "Quad Ultra eXtended Graphics Array [something]." Does anyone know what the "-W" means?

    Why don't manufacturers use a simple naming convention instead of these hideously long acronyms (hell, "Quxgaw" sounds like a word), and use something a little more desciptive- namely resolution. I think saying "Hey, my monitor is 3840x2400!" sounds better than "I got a Quxgaw sitting on my desk!"

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  3. Re:not so expensive... by rchatterjee · · Score: 2, Informative

    It's also a better value in the long run because from what I understand the average plasma display dies in about 18 months when the plasma "wears out" (though the technology is improving) while the LCD would last quite a bit longer (though I'm not sure of the exact amount of time).

  4. My posting was corrupted by openSoar · · Score: 3, Informative

    It seems something happened to my posting - I did check it thoroughly before I posted - honestly..

    Anyway - the plasma TV I was referring to is here and it is indeed 61" and $28K

  5. 2 sgi's USED to be affordable by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 3, Informative
    when the 1600sw was in the process of being discontinued (its now fully discontinued), there were many available on ebay and other outlets. I bought 2 of them along with an AGP and PCI card (one of each; both purely digital). I asked around to see if anyone could confirm that you could run Xinerama (dualhead single-logical-screen) but no one at SGI could confirm this (at least regarding xfree86) except the xf86 driver developer, himself! so I gave it a try and I couldn't be happier for it. having 2 1600x1024 lcd screens with a contrast ratio of 350 is just amazing. and the lcd+video card combo was usually less than $1k each (yes, I spent about $2k on my dualhead setup. is that a lot? well, for folks with poor/failing eyesight, all-digital lcd's are a godsend!)

    however, since these are long gone from the usual retail channels, their used price has skyrocketed and the used prices are now approaching the price of the units as if they were new! guess that tells SGI that they shouldn't have retired this design. (and they replaced it with a far inferior unit that only does 1280x1024, and via analog, too!) ;-(

    the downside of the lcd's is that they aren't the best for doing photo retouch work. interesting that you mentioned the nikon d1x - I just bought a used nikon d1 (original) and while its "only" 2000x1300 in output resolution, its still a darned good camera body and being able to shoot off 4.5frames/sec with no noticeable shutter lag or latency is still state of the art. but I do have to do my last stage of retouching on an actual CRT.

    CRTs will never go away. LCDs are uber-cool but bright highlights get blown out when you view on an LCD. I do mostly C-coding and sysadmin type stuff at home (and only occasional photo work), so the dual LCDs pretty much fit my need. but don't think that they're a complete substitute for a CRT in all cases, 'cause they're not.

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