DVI Flat Panels?
David_Bloom asks: "I've been shopping for flat panels, and have found it very hard to find a good deal on an LCD with DVI. My best bet so far is probably the NEC MultiSync 1550XBK (I've heard good things about its picture quality, and I'm not a gamer, so update times are irrelevant to me), but I've noticed that for about the same cost (~$600), I could buy a 17" Samsung LCD with that TV and video input thingy, but it only has analog VGA input (no DVI). I really don't want to buy a flat screen without DVI to avoid the phasing problems (its a must for me). Any reccomendations on good, low cost DVI-compatible flat screens? Any idea why monitors with DVI support are more (it's digital, so in theory, it should cost less, because there's no need for a analog to digital conversion)?"
Tom's Hardware Guide just did a review of 17" LCD panels in its Display guide section. Jump to the conclusion page and you'll find a single 17" LCD that they looked at with the DVI input - the "Belinea 10 17 20". Unfortunately, it's not all that great; the brightness leaves a lot to be desired, and it has serious trailing issues. It does cost only around $650, though. At least solutions in that price range do exist, though they're lacking in quality. Good luck finding a good one.
Every cloud has a silver lining (except for the mushroom shaped ones, which have a lining of Iridium & Strontium 90)
2 reasons:
1) Market dynamics. They sell far more VGA analog models (since there are so many people with VGA and so few with DVI) and so the economics make it much less expensive to manufacture and market those models. If they sold more DVI monitors, they would be cheaper (like the current trends for HDTVs).
2) Most people with DVI outputs are gamer and/or designer types who have spent alot more on video cards than the average user (who often spends nothing to get a VGA output since most motherboards have built-in video). They feel that if you're willing to pay for a DVI capable 3D accelerator, you would be willing to pay more to hook it up.
It is more productive to voice thoughtful opinions (reply) than to judge (moderate) others.
This is not ment to be a flame.
How can you not care about update times and only worry about phasing problems? your screwing yourself if you dont get a monitor that does well on both ends.
My best bet so far is probably the NEC MultiSync 1550XBK (I've heard good things about its picture quality, and I'm not a gamer, so update times are irrelevant to me), but I've noticed that for about the same cost (~$600), I could buy a 17" Samsung LCD with that TV and video input thingy, but it only has analog VGA input (no DVI).
I totally agree. I understand all about market value and supply and demand but isn't it outrageous to pay 250.- just for the manufacturer to take out the expensive AD converter and replace it with a cheap digital plug? I mean, appart from that, some relatively simple chips and a lot of patents, there isn't a real difference, right?
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Money is the root of all evil (Send $30 for more info)
I recently bought myself a 18" flat panel with DVI-D support for $500 from harddriveoutlet.com. It's an off-brand discontinued model, so if you're worried excessively about support then it's a bad choice, but these things are *really* sweet, and they are actually under warranty for another year. I use Sun 18" flats at work and have coworkers with Dell 18" DVI flats - both are good - but the cheapo offbrand that harddriveoutlet is clearing out is better and cheaper (unless the pixels die in two months).
Disclaimer: I'm not in any way connected with harddriveoutlet, and I'm also going to say anything more than "sorry" if you buy one and it breaks...
I did not design this game/I did not name the stakes/I just happen to like apples/And I am not afraid of snakes-AniD
Any idea why monitors with DVI support are more (it's digital, so in theory, it should cost less, because there's no need for a analog to digital conversion)?"
It is often a higher quality signal, and a more reliable and logical interconnect. Thus, they charge more.
And that ADC chip that converts from VGA to digital LCD-ready signals probably costs them about $0.75.
Hey Taco! Looks like you're using the "infinite monkeys and typewriters" scheme to generate Ask Slashdots again...
Finding a 15" DVI LCD is even more difficult.
I was very happy with my Apple 17" Studio Display (although I did have one pixel get stuck last month) and was looking for a 15" LCD to work as my second monitor. I have a Radeon 7000 working as a second video card, so it supported DVI and VGA.
I searched forever for a reasonably priced 15" LCD that supported DVI. They were simply not to be found. I ended up going with the NEC 1550V LCD that only supports VGA. Getting a similar monitor with DVI (the NEC 1550X, for example) was going to run me at least $100-$150 more.
In a side-by-side comparison, the Apple monitor is much nicer. I am not sure if that is attributable to the ADC connection (Apple's all-digital connector) or just the quality of the Apple monitor (it is frequently ranked as one of the better 17" LCDs).
My only guess as to the mark-up of DVI monitors is demand (lack of it, and then where the demand is coming from).
Most of my reading/research also indicated that, at least for now, there is a little to be gained from a DVI connection. When LCDs get even better, though, LCDs will be better able to take advantage of the all-digital connection.
- (c) 2018 Hank Zimmerman
like techbargains and fatwallet
i bought a 17" dell 1702fp (samsung/dvi+analog) for $500 with no tax and free shipping about a year ago
recently the dell 2000fp (1600x1200 native 20" dvi/analog/svideo lcd), highly reviewed here, was going for $800 including shipping.
You get what you pay for when it comes to LCD's.
I have at home an 18" Sun LCD and a 22" Apple Cinema Display. At work I have a 24" Sun LCD.
I'd take the Apple Cinema Display over the other two any day. Both Sun LCD's have both a VGA and DVI input (the 24" has c-video and s-video as well), but the Apple only has a single ADC (Apple display connector). The apple screen is the sharpest of the three.
Not to say the Sun 24" is bad, but the Apple one is just that little bit crisper. The 18" Sun LCD is crap -- the colors are all wrong, and it looks _awful_ on analog.
--NBVB
Pardon the sorta off-topic post, but this isn't much of a ask slashdot question and fits a bit with this topic:
:[ ) and Gigabyte Ethernet class G4 (ADC & VGA). I know I need to get the ADC-to-DVI converter for the G4, and I would be getting the most native DVI visuals from either the G4 and espically the Dell, but if I can edge out something better than VGA on the G4, it's worth the trouble. So, anyone have ideas for sollutions? Thanks in advance for the help!
Are there any KVM switch solutions that incorperate DVI natively?
The only thing that put me off on getting a flat screen (Outside of price) is trying to KVM a Dell Inspiron 8100 portable (VGA only
AnamanFan - Trying to find the Truth, one post at a time.
has dual dvi and vga inputs. its 16" which is somewhat rare but just the right size for running two of them side by side. its great. I have a pair at work AND a pair at home.
use the matrox g550 dual-dvi (important to ask the vendor if its REALLY dual dvi and not just dual video). then a special dual dvi cable and you're all set.
the cable is about $50 and the agp matrox card is about $150.
the lcd's are $529. a steal, really. and dell was offering free ground shipping when I got mine.
the model # for the sharp is LL-T1620-H/B.
note that its NOT a dell-branded display but really a Sharp brand with a black bezel. Dell Part# A0030174
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"It is now safe to switch off your computer."
I have an FP2000 running with the analog connection right now (my video card is a Matrox Millenium 2, hardly a match for the display). I'm curious about whether you had any problems getting the 2000FP to work with X11 in DVI mode at 1600x1200 or if you're using Windows...
Thanks!
(For those who don't know, the dell support forums are full of problem reports trying to get this think to work at 1600x1200 with DVI connections)
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I must have the magic sense - I picked out the monitor, then, by sheer coincidence, found out it's #1 on PC-WORLD's chart.
I'm just that good :-).
Karma: Excellent (fuck, even in the future moderation doesn't work!)
Now that I think of it...the monitor has to decrypt the DTCP encryption from the DVI signal (damn the MPAA!). That probably makes up a big chunk of the additional cost.
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No manufacturer removes the converters. I have never seen an LCD display without analog input capability. I use DVI to a Viewsonic at home and there is an Eizo at work with DVI. Both are also analog capable. I've seen both displays run using analog and the improvement with DVI is striking. If you are spending the bucks on an LCD get DVI on your video card. GeForce2 based cards with DVI are around for ~ US$60
Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
Free shipping isn't a big deal on flat panels (if I were in the CRT market, that would be a different story...). They typically ship for about $10 anyway.
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they are quite ok, relative cheap and fast, too, so no problems with games. i've got one for nearly a year and i am quite content with it. beware though, not all of them have dvi
"It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
In Omaha Nebraska, I shopped for months before getting a NEC model 1720M from Sam's Club for $450. It does 1280x1024, analog input only and I love this thing. I have found that I stay up later because my eyes don't get tired as soon. Would highly recommend LCD to anyone who stares at their display reading things like slashdot all day long. The other best deal I've heard about are the Dell 1600x1200 displays for around $850. Makes me wish I'd saved up for a little longer...
http://tinyurl.com/4ny52
Maximum PC gave Sharp's LL-T1820 (18") a perfect 10, the "Kick Ass!" award, and called it "the best we ever tested". This was in the August 2002 issue.
It got such high accolades due to "two new technologies that can measurably improve image quality: 10-bit gamma correction and Zero Voltage Black."
10-bit gamma correction improves over the trditional 8-bit gamma correction, and provides much better colour gradients. As for Zero Voltage Black, it helps with the broken pixels that will of course be present in any LCD. To sum it up, instead of a broken pixel simply shining all the time, broken pixels don't shine at all. To quote MPC, "The upshot is that broken subpixels on Sharp's new displays are relatively unobtrusive. Because they don't beam glaring backlight, they appear as subtle, muted flecks that blend in with the pixels of whatever's being rendered onscreen.".
The review is a bit old, and the price premium is high at 1300$ US. However, in august this display beat out all other comers.
Hasn't ATI now gone to DVI on the majority of their cards? My Radeon 7500 All-in-Wonder has a DVI connector (much to my annoyance at having to not lose yet another dongle), unsurprisingly, but a friend of mine's VE has one also.
Okay, way to make friends and influence people. So maybe I'm wrong -- that doesn't make me an idiot. And for the record, my video card doesn't support it: I didn't even bother to get a video card with DVI on it as I read that 1600x1200 over DVI was "unsupported", which I took to mean "it don't work". Since you say it does, I'll have to see if I can get this card upgraded.
-"Zow"
Excellent!
:)
I guess the danger of browsing the dell support forums is that you see an overwhelmingly negative view of their products. Very few people go there if their hardware works, so there aren't many success reports (I don't remember seeing any for Linux).
Thanks a lot!
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I'm using a Compaq fp700 which is DVI only. It has a great picture and is good for gaming (IMHO).
The only drawbacks to it for me are the crappy monitor stand that is integrated, and the fact that it only does 1024x768 (I have some software that will not even run in less than 1280x1024).
The reason I picked this monitor is that it was DVI and it was dirt cheap. I paid $149 for it. They go for between $150 and $200 on ebay.
Good luck!
I'd rather be a conservative nutjob than a liberal with no nuts and no job.
It's more expensive to buy a TV without an RF jack.
:-)
Because it's specialzed equipment at that point that fewer people buy (since not everyone has DVI, but everyone [excepting the occasional Mac user, and specialised PC user] has VGA). Becuase fewer people buy it, prices are higher, ergo, it costs more to have fewer features. Stupid, but true.
If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
Leave something out, it costs more: low-salt and sugar-free foods, exotic dancers, Microsoft Windows...
Yes, we see it everywhere.
Give me my freedom, and I'll take care of my own security, thank you.
I use a Planar 17.4" dealie. When I got it there were two types available at the same size, and with similar model numbers ... I have the dual analog/DVI input with pivot.
It's bright, fast, and compared with the others at the time I bought it (December of last year) was a steal at around $700. Any of the other brands with similar feature sets were priced at more like $1000.
Slashdot? Oh, I just read it for the articles.
Is there a way to use the Apple Cinema Display with a PC with video card with DVI out?
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"All LCD flat panels refresh at 60 Hz" is not precisely true. While the analog input may be running at 60Hz, the pixel refresh rate on an LCD monitor varies greatly, usually measured in milliseconds. This is the time it takes the pixel to change colors-- it's not quite the same as refresh on a CRT, where the rate is precisely controlled by the time it takes for the beam to scan back around to the same point.
Sorry I don't have time to dig you a link.
The Sony SDM-X82 (18.1") is standard issue at my new workplace. It switches via a front panel button between two input channels. One channel has both HD15 and DVI connectors, and the other channel has only a HD15 connector. I haven't used it with a DVI video card, but it looks great when driven by an analog signal. Color is good, and if it isn't, there's a lot of adjustability. My color vision is screwed up because of childhood medical problems, but my SDM-X82's OSD lets me jack up the contrast et al so that I see what others see at more normal settings. Response time is average, which might be good enough for gaming, but I wouldn't know because I don't game at work. The unit's aesthetics are excellent.
Washington, DC: It's like Hollywood for ugly people.