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Slack LCD TV Market Means Cheaper Phones And Monitors

Shakrai writes "CNN and Business2 are running a story about the apparent failure of LCD TVs to make a major market impact and what it means for you. Specifically for us geeks it means cheaper cellular phones and laptops due to an oversupply of LCD manufacturing. Does this mean I can finally afford that 21" LCD monitor I've always wanted?"

478 comments

  1. Probably not. by geminidomino · · Score: 0

    It means they jack up those prices to recoup their losses. Corps HATE losing money.

    1. Re:Probably not. by Pieroxy · · Score: 1

      Hmmm. You don't know much about business, do you?

    2. Re:Probably not. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      id assume their more likely to accept a loss, and lower prices to reduce how much they do lose...

    3. Re:Probably not. by Beatbyte · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't think corporations can do much about supply and demand...

      they want more money per unit so they adjust the supply (dump a bunch of at a cheaper price).

      then the supply is down and the demand is down and the price is higher

    4. Re:Probably not. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      more money per unit would be more on pricing, new manufacturing techniques, barganing with materials suppliers(sp)... and you cant dump more supply into the market and make the supply go down....

    5. Re:Probably not. by rwven · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not really... Supply and demand say that the price will go down... That's the way it works for EVERYTHING. LCD's aren't going to be some special case... and dropping the price will not make them lose anything. Those things are so stinkin overpriced compared to what they cost to produce that even a 50% price cut would still turn a pretty high profit...

    6. Re:Probably not. by lpangelrob2 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Umm... in general, corporations also want to dump inventory and take the loss now. Inventory is a bad thing... it's supply that you spent money to make and are spending money to keep. If you lose the inventory at a discounted price, at least you take in revenue and don't incur storage costs. See "Memory in the late 1990's" for another example.

    7. Re:Probably not. by AaronGTurner · · Score: 4, Insightful
      It's excess capacity, not execcess supply. I.e. excess potential to build LCDs. If you could break up a 17 inch LCD into 100 smartphone LCDs then the argument would be more directly one of supply since you could simply break up existing LCD stock. However instead excess LCD TVs will simply not be built.

      What you have is excess capacity of the creation of LCDs, and so the LCDs created will simply be ones for a different purpose. The production of LCD TVs will simply be lowered to match the demand such that price levels are approximately maintained. On the other hand production of LCDs for other gadgets for which the demand outstrips supply will be increased. This may lead to these items becoming slightly cheaper but there are many other factors involved in the pricing of a PDA or a phone (especially the latter given deep discounting already) that the price of these may not be greatly affected by a reduced screen cost.

      It is worth remembering that very few manufacturers make LCDs for computer monitors, even though there are very many brands. In terms of the retailers they will only wish to drop prices if it leads to such additional sales that it increases their profit. However they would rather sell more items at their current profit level. Market saturation and distinguishing your product on the basis of cost from a competitors comes into play here. Sometimes cutting the price of your monitor may not only reduce the profit margin but harm sales if your brand is considered to be a premium one. There are a lot of complex factors at play here.

    8. Re:Probably not. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and holding on to warehouses full of LCDs they can't move costs money, so they lower prices.

    9. Re:Probably not. by Eccles · · Score: 1

      As an example, consider how many stores have big sales after Halloween, Christmas, etc. Much of the merchandise could be saved and sold the next year at much less of a discount, but the overhead of inventory makes that not pay off.

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    10. Re:Probably not. by ifwm · · Score: 1

      "It's excess capacity, not excess supply"

      Nope. It's both.

      From the article

      "Predicts Erik Willey, senior product manager at display maker ViewSonic, 'We're going to see an oversupply for the foreseeable future.'"

    11. Re:Probably not. by 4of12 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Supply and demand say that the price will go down.

      The free market works great if

      1. there are many buyers and many sellers in the market,
      2. buyers or sellers don't collude with one another (effectively reducing the number of buyers or sellers), and
      3. there is free exchange of truthful information and a dearth of powerful and effective deceptive information.

      There are various examples where those conditions are not met.

      There are also a few other singular cases where the elasticity in the market can become strained, such as healthcare provision. If you're hurtin', you might be willing to pay a lot to feel better, not die, etc.

      On the LCD issue, I'm looking at big LCD TVs, like the Sharp Aquos 45". I like the native hi-res and the tolerably good pixel response time, but they're only just beginning to come onto the market and I'm not sure how expensive they are - the mentioned projected intial retail prices around US$10K are too steep for me, but if the price goes down 30% I'd probably get one. Samsung also has a big LCD in this size range.

      Anyone out there with either of those?

      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    12. Re:Probably not. by AaronGTurner · · Score: 1

      Ok, there may be some excess supply (they made a few too many LCD TVs) but they seem to have dealt with the excess supply (stopped making too many TVs) are are left with excess capacity to make TVs, which is now being tasked to things there is not an excess of. (Well, I would argue that there are far too many smartphones already, but for entirely different reasons!)

    13. Re:Probably not. by AaronGTurner · · Score: 1
      "Predicts Erik Willey, senior product manager at display maker ViewSonic, 'We're going to see an oversupply for the foreseeable future.'"

      I didn't spot that initially. It seems, then, they ViewSonic hadn't mastered just-in-time production, or had assumed that the LCD TV would be a rip-roaring success and they would need to create a large inventory to cope with initial demand.

      The question remains, does ViewSonic actually make the LCDs themselves? If not then there are two issues here: one is overcapacity for production of LCD TV screens, which is the problem of the manufacturer of the LCDs, and oversupply by ViewSonic, which is downstream of LCD production. Maybe ViewSonic makes its own LCDs, but it seems that most LCDs are made by Philips-LG and Hyundai, with Matsushita, Toshiba and Hitcachi also being players. I don't know if ViewSonic is owned by any of these companies or which screens they use (very probably Hyundai, though).

    14. Re:Probably not. by AnimusF6 · · Score: 1

      That is true, but keep in mind that 4th Quarter numbers are, for some unknown reason, viewed to be the most important by investors. Companys know this, and therefore do whatever they can to make their 4th quarter numbers look nice and shiny. If they are going to discount and dump inventory, chances are they will do it during the first quarter.

    15. Re:Probably not. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aaron, you seem awful anxious to show that everything is as it should be. Are you feeling concerned about the future?

  2. WHO CARES?! by Emrikol · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    When am I going to get my wide screen OEL TV?

    I've been waiting YEARS for that.

    I guess I'll have to settle with my cell phone for now . . .

    --
    You're all bastards!
    1. Re:WHO CARES?! by aboxbayz · · Score: 1

      O.T. but has OLED been made in available in a true consumer environment for more then cameras and the like ?

    2. Re:WHO CARES?! by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      They still need to be stabilized. I'm not sure if the colors are acceptably accurate. Polymer OLED has the better colors, but the different colors decay at different rates. IIRC, Monomer OLED lasts much longer, but the colors suck.

    3. Re:WHO CARES?! by cubicleman · · Score: 1

      OEL? What is this acronym? Never heard it.. (I've heard of DLP, LCD, HD, Plasma, etc..)

    4. Re:WHO CARES?! by edrain · · Score: 1

      It means Organic Electroluminescent apparently. News to me, too.

  3. About time... by jav1231 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    $389 for a 15" LCD screen can hardly be justified when 19" CRT's are half that price. Glad to see this coming.

    1. Re:About time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    2. Re:About time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    3. Re:About time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably Canada.

    4. Re:About time... by Cereal+Box · · Score: 5, Interesting

      That's still more than what a 19" CRT costs. And you STILL can't get an LCD that does 1600x1200 unless you buy a monitor that's 20" or larger or a laptop.

      Speaking of which, if my laptop, which is at least three years old, can do 1400x1050 on a 15" LCD, why can't I buy a 17" LCD monitor that can do that resolution or higher? Why is the cheapest LCD capable of anything higher than 1280x1024 nearly $1000?

    5. Re:About time... by orasio · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That is not true.

      $389 for a small, sleek, 15" flat, good at displaying text, reasonable power comsuming monitor, maybe digital capable.

      half the price for a big, bulky (as in taking a lot of desk space) 18" (not 19", because black border takes at least an inch) spheric monitor (because trinitrons are not that cheap, and flat monitors are dim-or-expensive), fuzzy, power hungry monitor.

      I believe many people believe it's a great deal. When it comes to 17 inchers, it's a non issue, if you can afford it.

      I can't afford another monitor right now, so I have a 17" IBM refurbished CRT, but I'm sure my next monitor will be LCD, because OLEDs are a long way from getting that cheap.

    6. Re:About time... by Lehk228 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      probably because of randomly distributed bad pixels, if customers were willing to accept LCD monitors with two or three bad pixels LCD's would be a hell of a lot cheaper, but when a batch produces so much wasted area that is too small for a normal display costs of large, high-res units will be much more expensive than somewhat smaller, low-res units. the difference is that CRT technology, while fundamentally more complex overall, is less difficult to manufacture in moderately large sizes without picture flaws.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    7. Re:About time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you think that is bas have a look at rack mounted keyboard/monitor combo at least $1000 + for a 15inch monitor, keyboard, touchpad

    8. Re:About time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've always wondered if people would buy in outlet malls LCDs with dead pixels. Not many, but I'd seriously consider paying $100 for a 17 inch Yons LCD if it said on the box "Between 1 and 10 dead pixels", and otherwise the normal gaurientee.

    9. Re:About time... by hyu · · Score: 0

      I was recently in the market for a 17" LCD, and finally bought one, got it home, and within two minutes I had a dead pixel. Unfortunately, on this monitor, a dead pixel wasn't black so much as the glowing blue you get on some televisions in input mode.

      Returned, got it replaced with another, and same problem.

      When I decided to go for another brand, forsaking Samsung, all the computer stores decided to try and save their own behinds and tell me that it was normal for a monitor to come with one or two or three dead pixels.

      So, in the end, I bought a 19" CRT for half the price I paid originally for the LCD, and it works fine. But it really does present a major problem? Why spend twice as much for an, admittedly, thinner and nicer product, when it is about six times as likely at least to break on you out of the box, and even then won't last as long? Maybe this LCD surplus is going to make them cheaper, but they're stil overall inferior to the CRT product.

    10. Re:About time... by Tim+C · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I can't speak for the US market, but here in the UK retailers make it plain that dead pixels on LCDs is normal, and that most manufacturers will only accept a return if there are more than some threshold number that are bad. Admittedly, this number is reasonably low, but I've never seen it quoted as being zero.

      I have an LCD monitor at work - 21", does 1600x1200 native. It has one dead pixel (stuck red) roughly in the lower right-hand corner of the upper-left ninth of the screen (if you see what I mean). It's a little irritating when I notice it, but most of the time I don't.

      My main concerns with LCDs, and the reason why I'm in the market for a new CRT rather than an LCD to replace my aging CRT, is performance for games, resolution, and price. As a programmer, I want as much screen space as possible, prefering to run at 1600x1200. As a gamer, I want the refresh rate up (no smearing once it hits 40 - 50 fps, please). As a poor guy with a car, mortgage, kid, etc, I want it affordable. Right now, that leaves me with no choice but a CRT. Still, I have a nice big desk, so that's not a problem.

    11. Re:About time... by kannibal_klown · · Score: 1

      At one point, a friend of mine bought a laptop. The manufacturer escapes me at this point (maybe Toshiba, maybe Dell, I don't know). He was unfortunate enough to have dead pixels.

      Anyway, they're threshold was horrible. It wasn't just the number, but they all had to be within the same area.

      It was like "more than 3 pixels in the same 4 square inches" or something like that.

      The place gave him a real hard time taking it back.

      I've been pretty lucky lately with LCD's.

    12. Re:About time... by jav1231 · · Score: 1

      With a name like Neso, it's got to be good! Let me just say that no-name LCD's don't count. Included in that $389 price should be SOME longevity.
      Of course now is where I get the reply that NESO is the world leader who sells most of their stuff to "all the big names" but only now have decided to come out of obscurity to sell to the public.

    13. Re:About time... by mekkab · · Score: 1

      That's still more than what a 19" CRT costs.

      But, but, its got built in speakers! It must be worth an iFortune!

      --
      In the future, I would want to not be isolated from my friends in the Space Station.
    14. Re:About time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My 4 year old SGI 1600SW does 1600x1024 in a 17" form-factor. It also looks at least as good as all the current model LCD monitors.

    15. Re:About time... by Denis+Lemire · · Score: 0

      Newer LCD panels with 16 ms response times are excellent for gaming. Its the older slower response LCD's that are known to blur.

    16. Re:About time... by xenoandroid · · Score: 1

      Funny I have a 17" of 1280x1024 and it only cost me $400, it's really responsive and bright too.

    17. Re:About time... by Cereal+Box · · Score: 1

      Again, a 19" CRT capable of 1600x1200 costs half than that or less.

    18. Re:About time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you considered using two monitors? I use a 17" CRT and a 17" LCD. The CRT is good for games and graphics and I use the LCD as the primary display for all text work. When programming I use both and with each running at 1280x1024 I've got considerably more screen real-estate than I would with one at 1600x1200.

    19. Re:About time... by Chandon+Seldon · · Score: 1

      The CRTs are no where near as bad as you seem to think.

      - You definately don't loose an inch on "black bars" if you adjust things right.
      - Flat CRT monitors are standard issue now - there are no price or performance issues with them.
      - The CRTs are slightly less sharp than the LCDs, but on the other hand they have a reasonable (i.e. greater than 60hz) refresh rate, so no ghosting.

      --
      -- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.
    20. Re:About time... by xenoandroid · · Score: 1

      My point was that it wasn't near $1000. To me the LCD was worth it, and the fact is that CRTs are cheeper partially because of the LCD monitors.

    21. Re:About time... by Cereal+Box · · Score: 1

      Ahem, please re-read:

      Why is the cheapest LCD capable of anything higher than 1280x1024 nearly $1000?

    22. Re:About time... by xenoandroid · · Score: 1

      I....knew...that...*mods self -1, dumbass*

    23. Re:About time... by ecloud · · Score: 1

      Well I just saw a 17" LCD for $299 at Office Max. If I had the spare cash I'd get a couple of them.

      Where I work they seem to consider CRT's mostly obsolete. New systems come with LCD monitors, and nice 19" and 21" CRTs are lying about, and there are salvage bins full of them outside (probably presumed dead, but I wonder sometimes). (I scavenged one I found in the office for my desk because it's still worth the space sacrifice to get 1600x1200 rather than 1280x1024; furthermore I stuck in a second video card (also scavenged) so I could do Xinerama and extend my main desktop onto my LCD, as a secondary monitor.)

  4. Does the LCD account for a big chunk of the price? by godIsaDJ · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Somehow I find it difficult to believe that the tiny LCDs that come with most mobile phones account for a big chunk of their price...

    PDAs though must be another story.

  5. yes by mirko · · Score: 3, Informative

    Does this mean I can finally afford that 21" LCD monitor I've always wanted?

    As a matter of fact, I am looking for the 20" (because there are no smaller LCD monitors which do 1600x1200) to cross the CHF 1000,- limit to acquire one.
    In June, these were 1400,-
    Now, they reached 1100,-

    This might be next month.

    --
    Trolling using another account since 2005.
    1. Re:yes by alatesystems · · Score: 1

      Get this one. It's awesome and $720.

      Chris

    2. Re:yes by hab136 · · Score: 1
      As a matter of fact, I am looking for the 20" (because there are no smaller LCD monitors which do 1600x1200) to cross the CHF 1000,- limit to acquire one.
      In June, these were 1400,-
      Now, they reached 1100,-

      Wow, Switzerland is expensive. The 2001FP mentioned below is $719.20.. or about CHF 908,- and have been about that price (on periodic sale) for at least a year.

    3. Re:yes by Paulrothrock · · Score: 2, Funny
      Where the heck do you people get the money to drop $1000 on a monitor? I work, make okay money, and don't have the money to buy lunch every day, let alone drop a grand on a monitor.

      Of course, I just got a $7,000 loan for a friggin' wedding.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    4. Re:yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      3 years ago I got a 15" LCD with my laptop that does 1600x1200. Unfortunatly at the time they didn't say there would be problems with the display at any other resolution. I didn't do my homework on LCD's at the time. Stupid me.

      They don't sell that high or resolution LCDs in laptops anymore.

    5. Re:yes by mirko · · Score: 1

      Possibly but if you're in the US, you usually get cheaper prices (for the low-end - I compared so it's not supposed to be a trollish comment, I swear).
      BTW, in .CH, all the prices include a recycling fee.

      --
      Trolling using another account since 2005.
    6. Re:yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Ditch the bitch and save your money. Take it from someone who's been there. Twice.

    7. Re:yes by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      I don't want to. I love her, and she's nice to me. Besides, I get more inheritance when I get married.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    8. Re:yes by Khaotix · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      loan? for a wedding? The Bride's parents are supposed to foot the bill ... and even if that isn't the sitiation I'd just assume do it somewhere free ... cost of weddding = $500 for food and a couple bottles of booze. Invite the few people that mean the most to you.

      All Done.

      $7k in debt for a wedding ... that's just plain silly.

    9. Re:yes by jweage · · Score: 1

      Yes they do. 15" 1600x1200 screens in Toshiba notebooks. The screen is beautiful.

    10. Re:yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You either have bad luck in picking women or (more accurate) there is something wrong with you, from your post I would guess it might be something to do with personallity...

    11. Re:yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      You don't have to marry someone to have sex with them. Trust me, as soon as you're married, she'll think that you are her personal slave. And you'll be stuck.

    12. Re:yes by mirko · · Score: 1

      They don't sell that high or resolution LCDs in laptops anymore.

      Maybe it's because such screens my consume more energy as well as being less used except by computer heads.

      I remember my first Mac, a white 12" iBook and its crisp 1024x768 screen, to die for.
      Why should I have gotten more points ?

      --
      Trolling using another account since 2005.
    13. Re:yes by maxwell+demon · · Score: 3, Funny
      Where the heck do you people get the money to drop $1000 on a monitor?

      Well, you don't have to do it all at once. Take a ten dollar note, drop it on the monitor. Then pick it up and drop it again. After 100 times dropping the 10 dollar note, you've dropped $1000 on your monitor.

      However, CRTs are much better suited for this, since they are not so easy to miss on dropping.

      I'd recommend against dropping coins, because if they fall into the monitor, they might cause a short circuit. But then, if they can actually fall into the monitor depends on the monitor and the coins.
      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    14. Re:yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      If you know anybody who works at Google, you can get that Dell monitor for $600...

    15. Re:yes by Suidae · · Score: 1

      I am looking for the 20" (because there are no smaller LCD monitors which do 1600x1200)

      Why is that? You see them on laptops all the time, but never as stand-alone. Is the laptop market eating them all up or what?

    16. Re:yes by Boone^ · · Score: 1

      My 20" LCD is on order, but it was $2000. Did I mention it has a G5 bolted on the back?

    17. Re:yes by mirko · · Score: 1

      I think so, on a laptop your eyes are much less than a meter from your screen because it's on your knees.

      --
      Trolling using another account since 2005.
    18. Re:yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not uncommon for a person, male or female, to become bitter after a couple of very bad experiences. It will go away in time, but don't chalk it up to his personality, since you do not know his personality before getting fucked around, and only know what he's said in a couple of comments on slashdot.

    19. Re:yes by bwindle2 · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      At least in America, we are a society of debt. A friend of mine has all the latest toys, a huge TV, a Dell 2001FP LCD monitor hooked to a really fast PC, and yet makes about what I make.. the difference is I have no credit card debt, while he has recently maxed out his newly-acquired $5000 limit card.

    20. Re:yes by Anonymous+Luddite · · Score: 1



      We have these at work. They absolutely rock.

    21. Re:yes by AsbestosRush · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      wow, that's broken. I'm shure glad I'm not you, because the easiest person to fix in any relationship is yourself. If you're a magnet for freaks and psychos, perhaps you should analyze yourself to figure out why.

      --
      EveryDNS. Use it. It works.
      AC's need not reply
    22. Re:yes by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      You'll save even more money when the bride doesn't show up!

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    23. Re:yes by MikeBabcock · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I've talked to my friends who have big screen TVs and huge houses and then find out they're a third of a million in debt and feel much happier with my 27" TV from six years ago and my townhouse.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    24. Re:yes by MikeBabcock · · Score: 2, Funny

      Nicely said ... ... PS, go back through Slashdot and read the article about how to secure one's posessions in college and check if the same guy told the dude to just ignore his computer and go screw every girl on campus instead.

      Yup yup, its that AC dude.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    25. Re:yes by AaronGTurner · · Score: 1

      They are down below $1100 now - more like $700.

    26. Re:yes by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1
      True, true. My fiancee and I make enough to pay off all of our debt (except her student loans) in six months and still have enough to live on.

      Besides, I bet we'll get a lot of presents for the wedding. And the stuff on our registry is kinda expensive.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    27. Re:yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There used to be a 19" LCD monitor at 1600x1200, but it wasn't any cheaper than the 20" models, and not particularly spectacular in other ways, either...

      I'm happy with my 20.1" monitor...of course I bought it over a year ago and paid quite a bit for it...

    28. Re:yes by jcdr · · Score: 1

      Before last year I owned a CRT 21" (real 20") Sony F500 that have been CHF 2400.-- at buy time, 4 years ago. This was one of the top most clear and precise monitor you can get in normal shop at this time, providing 1600x1200 at 85Hz with linear and superbe colors.

      When it break, I discovered that LCD 20" 1600x1200 Acer AL2021 is only CHF 1300.--, almost half the price of the CRT before. I immediately buy it and I found that the product is great fot that price, even if the frequency is only 60Hz and the colors not completely linear (you can see that while watching movies). But the sharp, contrast and stability is far superior. Not mention to the space saved on my desktop!

      The probleme is that 20" LCD TV you can buy now cost CHF 1300.-- (same as a 20" LCD monitor) but for only 1024x768 at 50Hz!!! This is just crap as you lost the possibility to get good picture while using it for other thing than TV.

      A better solution if to buy a 20" LCD monitor and a TV tunner card for a old PC without fan booting a USB flash device. I sucessfully use a quiet, NFS rooted PC for that.

    29. Re:yes by Tassach · · Score: 1

      My wife and I did a black tie wedding for under $2500 for over 50 guests. The majority of this was for the caterer -- and the food was excellent. Decorations were all home made, wedding dress was hand-made by my mother-in-law, and the venue was free .

      --
      Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
    30. Re:yes by phurley · · Score: 1

      I will back this up. I am "working" on a pair of them at this very moment. I replaced a pair of 21" CRTs and have never been happier. Additionally, my office is measurably cooler without the large CRT displays.

      --
      Home Automation & Linux -- now I know I'm a geek
    31. Re:yes by Buran · · Score: 1

      That one looks a lot like the Envision 19" I got at CompUSA for $500 + tax (came out to $530) the other week. I got the last one in all of St. Louis. It is now no longer listed on the CompUSA site and Google's cached copy of the page lists it as costing $670. I wonder what happened ...

      Envision EN9250 Monitor : Hardware-Corner.net

      It looks quite nice without the goofy-looking pencil holders, which fortunately are removable and in fact don't come preinstalled. I left them in the box when I stored the box in the closet.

      I did want a 1600x1200 monitor, but the price was way out of whack with the prices of smaller LCDs. I agree with other posters who are frustrated that you cannot get a 1600x1200 17" or larger LCD if Dell's been able to cram such a thing (even smaller!) into their Inspiron laptops. I wasn't willing to overpay, so when I saw the $500 deal I jumped on it.

      The picture quality is very good, too, in standard 2D use and in 3D (Doom 3, which I am running at low res, so it's not at the monitor's native res) use. It does do portrait-mode rotation, though there's no automatic sensor, but I expect to do that relatively rarely so the short amount of time it takes to activate the bundled software that rotates the display for you is really no big deal.

    32. Re:yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $7000 - too much!
      just go to justice of peace to get married.
      $50 max.
      buy yourself and your bride a family bucket of KFC chicken for your reception - $12 max.
      buy yourself and your bride a pack of condoms for your honeymoon - $5 max.
      if your looking to have kids; no condoms (- $5 )

      get married for less than $70 max

      remember, and never forget;
      marriage is about the long term commitment,
      the love that is professed between you and your soul mate;
      dont make it all about the ceremony or party

      besides, it means more money for the electronic toys !!

    33. Re:yes by Buran · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Sadly, yes, there's a "charge it" mentality in a lot of the US, but I feel glad I'm not one of those people.

      I have a 20" JVC flat tube (not LCD) TV that does just what I need, a Tivo, a $90 DVD player, a homebuilt Athlon XP 2200+ computer, a $500 19" LCD monitor (patience pays off when you watch for good deals), a 4.5-year-old (and paid off, and lightly modded, thanks to local VW club) 2000 VW Golf that I love to death and that looks like it's just-off-the-lot new, a G4 Powerbook obtained through work, a small house in a great neighborhood inherited from Grandma (who couldn't live alone anymore, and is in assisted living/nursing-home now), and only about $1k of debt, partly due to just having gone on vacation and payments are going out to attack that as soon as my next paycheck hits. I also have a healthy pair of savings accounts for personal use and emergencies.

      Debt? Who needs that? Geek girls can be happy with not too much junk!

      Of course, I'm 29 and (amicably) divorced and largely miserable, but that's another matter ... the guy I really want is taken. Being married can be expensive at times, but sometimes I'd trade that for being happy again.

    34. Re:yes by smithmc · · Score: 1

      I think so, on a laptop your eyes are much less than a meter from your screen because it's on your knees.

      My "laptop" is on my desk about 350 days out of the year, and I still appreciate the very high resolution of the display.

      --
      Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
    35. Re:yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love her, and she's nice to me.

      I sense a disparity here.

      "[Eat] recycled food; it's good the for the environment and OK for you."

      (Seriously though, congratulations. The rest above was just my jealously talking.)

    36. Re:yes by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Where the heck do you people get the money to drop $1000 on a monitor? I work, make okay money, and don't have the money to buy lunch every day, let alone drop a grand on a monitor. Of course, I just got a $7,000 loan for a friggin' wedding."

      Hehehe...yeah, I think you've gotten plenty of answers. I've dodged marriage at least 2 times...don't have any kids I know of...and get to enjoy all my $$ myself. Much cheaper to date...and you get to 'trade models' without losing half your stuff every time.

      Also, depends on what you do and where you live...expenses in LA aren't that bad...and contracting can easily earn the DBA/Data Modeler $50-$107/hr depending on where you are, and how good your negotiating skills are...and how much a cut you have to give to a contract employer.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    37. Re:yes by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1
      Yes, but I am incapable of dating. I am so geeky that women drawn to me by my stereotypical "tall, dark and handsome" are instantly repelled by the stream of technical information spewing forth from my mouth. Luckily, I found a woman very early on who can deal with it, and actually likes it.

      Last night she asked me to explain how the Internet worked. How hot is that?

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    38. Re:yes by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      I just usually treat myself to one BIG toy a year...usually to coincide with my annual bonus. Couple years ago...was a 60" projection tv...one year a Tivo w/lifetime sub. and a couple other things.

      This year...needing a new set of Wusthof -Trident Knives ....only about $1200 US for a 26 piece set. Great if you like to cook.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    39. Re:yes by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      Well, one way to look at it...on the other hand, one of the BEST and most SUCCESSFUL way to attract women...MONEY. And if you're single, you can have lots of it to throw around.

      And it doesn't take all that much to talk them up...just try for any topic not technical as you say....and you'll do just fine. First rule...keep THEM talking as much as you can. Most of my conversation with them is just asking them questions, commenting on what they say..ask 'what that means to them'...etc. All of this makes you sound like the 'best listener' they've ever known...that'll get you a long way towards getting what you 'really' want...

      :-)

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    40. Re:yes by metamatic · · Score: 1

      $7k for a wedding? I think you answered your own question.

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    41. Re:yes by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1
      'best listener' they've ever known...

      I was that guy all through high school. And then the hot chick ran off to the disgusting piggish bastard who only wanted sex from her and didn't bother listening.

      They would always ask me "why aren't there more guys like you" when they really meant "why aren't any of the cool guys like you?"

      And why are you giving me dating advice. I'm getting friggin' married! ;-)

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    42. Re:yes by cachorro · · Score: 1

      Where the heck do you people get the money to drop $7000 on a friggin' wedding? I work, make okay money, and don't have the money to buy lunch every day, let alone drop a seven grand on a wedding.

      Of course, I just got a $1,000 loan for a monitor.

    43. Re:yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and what's wrong with being in debt the rest of your life as long as you can make the monthlies? Seriously. I don't get the whole "debt-free joy" thing people keep talking about. Sure, I've got a mortgage. Why would not having one make me happier, other than not paying the monthly amount?

    44. Re:yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you didn't, but we inferred that you were actually buying a Mac and realized that $2000 put toward Mac gear and $2000 put toward PC gear is not an equal comparison. Have fun printing out those newsletters, Apple-boy

    45. Re:yes by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      Touche. :-)

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    46. Re:yes by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "And why are you giving me dating advice. I'm getting friggin' married! ;-)"

      'Cause, if you're not married yet...you still got time to get out of it...

      :-)

      And also, just to help anyone else out there teetering on a decision such as yours...

      :-)

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    47. Re:yes by austus · · Score: 1

      Maybe it's a good thing if she doesn't show up if she's upset at the idea of a simple, romantic wedding instead of a large, pretentious, and financially painful wedding.

    48. Re:yes by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      *rofl*

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    49. Re:yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. And you are not taken. I am surprised.

    50. Re:yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you've got enough money to get married, it's time to go out and buy another motor car.

      Or PC or two.

    51. Re:yes by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      I just got a new Titanium-Ceramic frying pan :)

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    52. Re:yes by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      Well, yes, I forgot, I am married, and she's got a Slashdot account too ;-).

      So yes, I was a lot richer when single and having not had a couple children, but much happier with the family to come home to.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    53. Re:yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like a really good computer case, or a really good keyboard, good displays are the one thing that can often survive multiple generations of computers. Sure, displays get bigger, better resolution, and cheaper over time, but the expensive 17" Sony Trinitron I bought 7 years ago is still a pretty good monitor against modern ones. I certainly wouldn't throw it away as useless. I can amortize the display cost over a long time, and still be getting good performance from it years later.

      By contrast, some CPUs and systems of that vintage are pretty slow now, and near useless for some things that are taken for granted on modern machines. I usually buy behind the curve rather than the best when it comes to CPUs, because it saves a wack of money if I wait just a few months. Display cost drops much slower.

      Displays and keyboards are also something I'm willing to spend more on, because that is what I am interfacing with all day long. They are the *last* things I would scrimp on. Maybe I'm crazy, but I'd rather scrimp a little on disk or memory than get a crappy display or uncomfortable keyboard. At least disk and memory can be incrementally added more cheaply later. You can't add more resolution to your monitor or improve its dot pitch by spending another $100 after you already spent $700. So, yeah, I'd spend $1000 on a monitor, if it was a good one, and I would rest assured I wouldn't have to do that again for a good 5-7 years.

      Oh, and I spent 10 years later :-)

    54. Re:yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the? The Preview did not reflect the submission (it tripped on the less-than symbol). The last sentence was:

      Oh, and I spent <$1000 on my wedding, and it was still fun :-)

    55. Re:yes by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      What an entirely anachronistic tradition. :P

      When I got married, I had my friend do it (at the time, it was possible to get a temporary officiant's license for a day), had two witnesses (and an extra friend) and did it in my living room. Afterwards, we went for an expensive brunch. The whole cost of the wedding was less than $400CDN. I could have afforded more, but neither of us wanted to make a show out of it. We had fun and did what we wanted.

      That said, if your idea of a wedding is a more traditional one, go for it.

    56. Re:yes by Llama_STi · · Score: 1

      big spendahh!!

      way to make a special, once-in-a-lifetime event memorable! i'm sure she'll make you pay for it later...

    57. Re:yes by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      It was more her idea than mine. Neither of us are big on ceremony.

    58. Re:yes by Llama_STi · · Score: 1

      i just hope that it's not one of their "prove it to me" ideas. :(

      btw, for some reason i had you marked as a friend so sorry about being sarcastic before. :)

    59. Re:yes by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      Hey, no problem. I'm not offended. :)

      And I'm sure this is the way she wanted it. If I weren't, I probably wouldn't have married her, eh? :D

  6. Speaking of LCDs... by scovetta · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Can anybody comment on the finest, cheapest LCD monitors available? I'm looking to get 2 or 3 of them for a kick-ass multi-monitor setup, but I don't want to get crap, nor spend $1200 a pop.

    I'd *like* 1600x1200, and I want 19"+

    I open the floor to /.

    --
    Wer mit Ungeheuern kämpft, mag zusehn, dass er nicht dabei zum Ungeheuer wird. --Nietzsche
    1. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by alatesystems · · Score: 4, Informative

      Dell 2001FP.

      That is almost half of the price you said and a VERY awesome monitor. I work at a healthcare facility and several of our physicians have this monitor and it is awesome. Great response time as well. Very crisp.

      Chris

    2. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by hab136 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Dell 2001FP

      That is almost half of the price you said and a VERY awesome monitor. I work at a healthcare facility and several of our physicians have this monitor and it is awesome. Great response time as well. Very crisp.

      Let me second that. With a 25% off coupon plus pre-Christmas sale, I spent like $700 on mine a year ago, and it's the best computer purchase I've ever made. 20.1", 1600x1200, DVI, VGA, S-video, composite, and Picture-in-Picture. Oh, plus it rotates, so you can do the portrait thing - which seems cool but I never use it.

      Man, I should get a commission on these things. :)

    3. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We got those at work and they were so nice and at a great price, so I got one for home.

    4. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by Dive+Buddy · · Score: 1

      I just got one of those monitors, and I was curious if there was any way to have the monitor detect that you put it in portrait mode?

    5. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by aboxbayz · · Score: 1

      If you are looking to go multi-head and you are the cheek geek try this this:httpaccessoriesusdellcomsnaProductDetailaspxs kuA0080198cuslencs04categoryid4347firsttrthis I saw this setup at my doctors office (it's what they use to view x-rays on and as I was jotting down the model number a slightly disturbed IT staff member politely asked me what the hell I was doing so close to one of his children. Anyways we had a long talk about my monitor envy and he told me that the setup had actually came from dell. Then he gave me the name of his therapist.

    6. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been happy with a 19" Planar LCD. Was about $600 mail order last November. DVI and fast response rate for games. Looks wonderful on Windows. But it was a good eight months later before RedHat caught up with my NVidia driver.

    7. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have heard bad things about the quality control on these screens. It's a kickass monitor, but you might have to return 2 or 3 to get a good one.

    8. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by hab136 · · Score: 1
      I just got one of those monitors, and I was curious if there was any way to have the monitor detect that you put it in portrait mode?

      No. I looked for a long time. I originally thought that it might give feedback through the USB connector, but that really is just a hub, nothing more.

      On the bright side, Nvidia and ATI both have quick-profile modes, so it should only be two clicks (or a hotkey) away.

    9. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think that you should get the NEC LCD1980SX monitor since you are going for a multi-screen setup. These screens have a very thin bezel (about 2/3 the width of a US Dime) making it appropriate for a two or three screen setup. They do max out at 1280 x 1024 so maybe you won't want to use them, but I've been very happy at that resolution. And they seem to be selling on NewEgg for $739.

      I think the ultra-thin bezel makes is worth the extra $$$ versus the Dell 2001FP of course I am not comparing apples to apples, since the Dell is a 20 inch and I showed you a 19 inch screen.

      In all fairness, you are right that most 20 inch LCDs are $1,000+, but with two 19 inch LCD screens you get a generous 2,560 x 1,024.

      Ultimately, it comes down to how much money you got in your wallet (doesn't it always!)

    10. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by Dive+Buddy · · Score: 1

      Thanks for saving me the trouble of trying to figure this out. I already determined that Dell's support web site is not the friendliest :)

    11. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by itsownreward · · Score: 1

      That's not been my experience. I and several of my coworkers got two of these monitors each, along with an ATI video card that can support dual monitors. Not one dead monitor, one dead pixel and all are awesome. The only complaint I have is that one of my monitors is "warmer" in color than the other. That can be adjusted with the onscreen menus, though.

    12. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by frantzdb · · Score: 1

      For those concerned with image quality, I would not reccomend this. I got one, then, when I saw that every other row of pixels alternated gamma which produces alternating brightness for midtones like this (black arrows point to bright rows). I had Dell sent me a replacement, and another, then I asked for my money back and they sent me another replacement. Then I sent that right back, reiterated my desire for my money; they sent me a fourth replacement (fifth monitor). All five of them behaved this way. After two hours on the phone, I got permission to return my monitor for a refund. I still don't have my refund.

      I've since gotten a Samsung SyncMaster 213T from Amazon, which had the best price considering no tax, and free shipping. Unfortunately it was $1056 rather than the $770 that the refurbished Dell did, but the Samsung is beautiful.

    13. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean this url?

    14. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by Buran · · Score: 1

      It probably comes with bundled software that has a system tray icon that you right-click, or adds menu items to the desktop context menu, or both. My Envision EN9250 did this and it works fine. No mercury switch to break and I don't expect to use the rotation much.

      I also have a GeForce FX5500 and the NVidia reference drivers. Do those have rotation built in as well? If so, I haven't found it yet. If anyone knows that they do, let me know and after I verify that it has it on my install, I'll remove the bundleware.

    15. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by Zcipher · · Score: 1

      While I don't know if it's the same exact model, I'll caution you not to buy Dell LCDs unless you have to. The school I work for has several labs worth of them, and I used to have a couple on my desk for all my computers. We recently purchased several ViewSonics, and were absolutely agog at how much clearer and brighter they are. Sitting them next to each other, the Dells were about 25-30% dimmer, and correspondingly less legible.

      This is pertinent, as when I started this job, I had excellent night vision (I have nearly 20/20, for reference). Right about the time we swapped to the ViewSonics, I had noticed that, when driving home at night, I was having a lot more trouble reading road signs, license plates, etc. when there were bright lights about. Since moving to the ViewSonics, my vision has been steadily recovering. YMMV, of course, but I won't spend another 6 months in front of a Dell unless I absolutely have to.

      (And before anyone asks, yes, I can pretty much say it's not just because I was just spending more time in front of a computer; my time at Uni was spent almost entirely in front of my iMac's CRT, and that was 4 years w/o any significant decline. Compare this to the decline from 6 months of Dell.)

    16. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've only ever purchased CRTs from them but monitorsdirect.com is great, in fact, most people are pretty foolish for not buying from a place like them. The Cornerstones are their own brand and you generally get free shipping with them. I've never had much of a problem with them, the one time I did, I got a prompt response by email with the actual solution (my wife moved my bass from the floor to the desk, it caused distortion and I didn't think of the big magnet first, duh).

    17. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by Nikker · · Score: 1

      I have to agree, comming from someone who bought the FP2000 (same specs but no swivel base) I love the monitor. Games are pretty good but in some high FPS games you can notice a flicker but other wise it is flawless. Even the viewing angle only leaves out maybe a 10 degree extreme from both sides at most and is very bright.

      YMMV but this is one happy customer!!

      --
      A loop, by its nature, continues. If that didn't make sense, start reading this sentence again.
    18. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by notsoclever · · Score: 1

      I recently got an HP L2335. 23", 1920x1200, has DVI, SVGA, s-video, composite, and component inputs (so it doubles as an HDTV and then some), and costs $1600. They also have (relatively) smaller displays for much less (I think their 21" 1600x1200 is $800ish).

      Look at their business/pro line rather than their consumer crap. (The nearly-identical monitor in their home line costs like $2300, has fewer inputs and has some atrocious built-in speakers.)

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people: ones who understand ternary, ones who don't, and ones who think this joke is about binary
    19. Re:Speaking of LCDs... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I used to have two 19 in screens that did 1280x1024, and I traded them in for a single 1920x1200 display. I've found that no matter how cool you think multi-monitor setups look, they just are no substitute for a single large display. About the only practical reason to choose a dual monitors over a single one (that I've seen) is video editing.

      A pair 15in LCDs will run you about $500, and will get you a display area of 2048x768. for $500, you could also get a single 19 in LCD, which will get you 1280x1024. If I were you, I'd go for the one 19 in. It's less total area, but it's much more usable.

      If you really want 1600x1200 (and who wouldnt?), you'll need to look at 21 in. displays. They're around $1000.

  7. for us geeks?! by carrett · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Specifically for us geeks it means cheaper cellular phones and laptops due to an oversupply of LCD manufacturing.

    I think LCDs are the kind of things that attract non-geeks too. I mean, we've been trying to use eye-candy to lure people into using linux for ages (and by ages I mean...a couple of years). So I think a lot of people are going to start buying LCDs if they become cheap. I mean, I know plenty of geeks who would love to have a 21" LCD too. Maybe I just hang around all geeks and so I have no true perception of what "normal" people are like. In any event it's good that the prices are being lowered.

    --
    I'm against picketing but I don't know how to show it.
    1. Re:for us geeks?! by Zrech · · Score: 0

      "Maybe I just hang around all geeks and so I have no true perception of what "normal" people are like."

      I know thats true in my case lol

    2. Re:for us geeks?! by mewphobia · · Score: 1

      Is this Score 5, Interesting because it's interesting that a)

      Maybe I just hang around all geeks and so I have no true perception of what "normal" people are like.

      as in it's interesting cause he's telling the truth but we can relate or b)

      In any event it's good that the prices are being lowered.

      i'm confused but i don't mean to troll.

  8. Not surprising by Dekks · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Its really not suprising they haven't really taken off, who wants to pay $500 for a 15 inch LCD television/monitor when they can get a 40 inch widescreen flatscreen tube for the same price? To be honest I can't see much of a difference between Plasma, Projection and Tube televisions when I'm just watching regular broadcast cable anyway.

    1. Re:Not surprising by pete-classic · · Score: 2

      I can tell. The CRT is brighter and has a wider viewing angle.

      -Peter

    2. Re:Not surprising by starbird · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Thats how I see it. Unless your living in an apartment the size of a jail cell, there doesn't seem to be much incentive to buying an overpriced small tv.

    3. Re:Not surprising by ePhil_One · · Score: 2, Informative
      I can tell. The CRT is brighter and has a wider viewing angle.

      Its also heavier (important for the younger crowd thats likely to move two more times in the next 10 years), has an unweildy depth (about 3 feet versus 6" thus occupying more square footage, big for us in expensive urban areas), and consumes far more power, which generates far more heat (higher bills).

      The problem I have is prices are falling rapidly and the tech keeps improving. (In 1 year the Dell 30" LCD TV I'm eyeing has fallen 30%, to about $2,200). I'd still really prefer a 1080p panel, or better yet a 2160p panel (2x 1080i, 3x 720p; no interpolation, or better yet, interpolate those extra pixels).

      --
      You are in a maze of twisted little posts, all alike.
    4. Re:Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen buddy.

      Even if LCDs were better, consumers have demonstrated time after time that they are willing to settle for a less expensive product even if they have to compromise slightly. They actually want to get something for their money. My favorite example is VHS vs Beta. In the beginning, the image from Beta was better but not enough to justify the extra cost. The consumer market is pretty much all VHS now. (The same logic makes me wonder if we the consumer really care if we ever get HDTV.) A counter example is that everyone was willing to switch from vinyl to CD. In that case, the added convenience was easily convincing enough that we were willing to switch. So what has LCD got? It's thinner. I'm sorry but that is not enough to get me to part with my hard earned bucks.

    5. Re:Not surprising by Threni · · Score: 1

      ...and doesn't suffer from burn in, is more reliable, has faster screen update rate, handles areas of similar colour better (less artefacts) etc etc. Newer isn't always better.

    6. Re:Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It may not be the color or the picture difference most people notice, but the size. Most of us don't live in the city and don't have to worry about conserving space in a cramped apartment. Then again, some of us do. Some people are willing to pay the extra price so that their television set won't consume a large part of their studio apartment ;)

    7. Re:Not surprising by emc · · Score: 1

      Its also heavier (important for the younger crowd thats likely to move two more times in the next 10 years), has an unweildy depth (about 3 feet versus 6" thus occupying more square footage, big for us in expensive urban areas), and consumes far more power, which generates far more heat (higher bills).

      #1) I have had the same 19" monitor since 1997. It's about 40lbs, and I have moved no less than 5 times in those 7 years. Never once have I thought, "I need to get a lighter monitor".

      #2) My monitor (19" dinosaur) is about 14" deep... not 3 feet deep...

      #3) Those 5 moves in 7 years were all in the SF Bay Area, and never once did I think "Man, I need to get a smaller footprint monitor, so I can save on rent!"... Why? because that extra 1 square foot is not optional in a house/apartment.

      #4) I live in California. We have high electricity costs. at 13 cents per kilowatt hour, go ahead and figure out how much a monitor will cost you, when it is in sleep mode for 16 hours a day (8 hours of actual use) and see how big of a dent that makes in your wallet. A general and modern monitor (viewsonic) at 19" draws about 135 watts.
      8 hours * 135 watts * 365 days = 394 kilowatt hours. At $0.13 per KwH (which is quite high), that comes out to $51 per year... that's one day at the movies with your SO.

      LCD is significantly below the quality of plasma as far as TVs go. LCD TVs are for the "Want Champagne, but can only afford Coors" crowd...

      The drawbacks of LCD are too significant to replace CRT, especially when the price point of LCDs is so high. Viewing angle, response time, artifacts, contrast, etc... all crappy on most consumer level LCD monitors.

    8. Re:Not surprising by emc · · Score: 1

      In my energy use calculation above, I forgot to count in "sleep draw"... which is usually around 10 watts or so...
      so add in $7.50 to make it about $58 per year.

      A 19" LCD draws about 45 watts, with 10 watts for sleep mode... so that comes out to $17 per year for usage + $7 for sleep... $24 annualized cost...

      $34 per year in electricity is hardly worth the $300 extra the monitor would cost... even given the other benefits, due to the drawbacks.

    9. Re:Not surprising by CoughDropAddict · · Score: 1

      Those 5 moves in 7 years were all in the SF Bay Area, and never once did I think "Man, I need to get a smaller footprint monitor, so I can save on rent!"

      It's not about saving on rent, it's about having space left on your desk after you put the monitor on it.

      LCD is significantly below the quality of plasma as far as TVs go. LCD TVs are for the "Want Champagne, but can only afford Coors" crowd...

      When was the last time you looked at LCD TVs? I've been looking at TVs lately, and IMO the Sharp 26" LCD TV was one of the the best-looking things in the store.

    10. Re:Not surprising by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

      In many places, the real-estate is more valuable than the price difference between a 40" plasma and a 40" tube.

    11. Re:Not surprising by emc · · Score: 1

      Honestly, I have not looked at a TV under 36" in four years.

      I'm in the market for a ~50 inch TV.

      I hate projection TVs... crappy quality, and many other drawbacks make them undesirable in my book.

      I will admit that the Aquos line is nice...

    12. Re:Not surprising by ePhil_One · · Score: 1
      #1) I have had the same 19" monitor since 1997. It's about 40lbs, and I have moved no less than 5 times in those 7 years. Never once have I thought, "I need to get a lighter monitor".

      The grandparent refered to a flatscreen 40" tube TV. I'm not sure what model he's refering to, but I'm sure its heavier than my brother's 32" flatscreen tube TV, which weighs about 132 lbs and is a real bitch to move, especially up and down stairs.

      I'm currently thinking about a new bedroom TV, to replace my 20" 15 year old set. I want HD capable and widescreen. A 30" Tube TV version is $700 from BJ's (warehouse club), a 30" Dell LCD is about $2200. The extra money saves me 100+lbs of weight, and the narrow depth means I can put it anywhere in my room, The Tube TV needs furniture pulled out from the wall to accomadate the depth, will dominate the decor, and contribute more heat to the room than I care to deal with.

      Plasmas aren't really a concideration, despite you flippant comment, they typically start at 42" and used to have bad burn in problems. They say they are better now, thanks but I'll wait till I see one that lasts 5 years in an always on environment before I drop $6k on one. They are more for the I don't care about the money crowd, or the "I'm to stupid to research the tech" crowd.

      Hmm, price point of LCD's too high. The 20" LCD I want goes for $700 if I shop, a decent 21" is going for about $500. I plan to spend my time in front of the monitor enjoying a flicker free all digital image, not at a 70 degree angle too itplaying fast twitch games till my eyes burn.

      #3) Those 5 moves in 7 years were all in the SF Bay Area, and never once did I think "Man, I need to get a smaller footprint monitor, so I can save on rent!"... Why? because that extra 1 square foot is not optional in a house/apartment.

      Didn't say you would save on rent; what you get is an extra two feet of space between you and your TV. Which means more space for you. I would love an extra two feet of space in my apartment, if you don't care, more power to you. Next time I'm in town, I'll drop of some boxes you can store for me, since you clearlly have extra room...
      Now, since that seems to be on your plans, and you seem to have a "Champale" budget, I think a CRT is a good choice for you. Just don't assume that your concerns are mine

      --
      You are in a maze of twisted little posts, all alike.
    13. Re:Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      is he talking about a monitor or a TV.
      Pick one, and stick with it.

  9. They underestimated the price/size/quality. by garcia · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They were stupid if they thought they were going to make money on them. Have you seen an LCD TV? They are very very small and they are very expensive. I have seen them side by side with standard TV sets and the newer plasma and other expensive alternatives and they just don't look good.

    I myself was suckered into buying a low-end 27" TV from Apex. It's only needed as a secondary TV but the price was right. Why should I spend $1000 on a 15" LCD when I can spend $200 on a 27" with DVD built in?

    1. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by jumpingfred · · Score: 1

      I don't know where you are finding $1000 LCD TVs. A year ago I got a 17 inch LCD TV/monitor for $600.

    2. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by Neil+Watson · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It would be interesting to know what the power consumption costs are over the life of the CRT versus the LCD TV. As I understand it, LCD's use much less power.

    3. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 3, Informative

      I was just pricing this out this morning. My conclusion: Given my typical usage, a new 17" LCD (to replace my 17" CRT) would save me $10-$15 per year in electricity costs. (This is figuring about 5 hours of usage a day; probably a bit on the high side, when I remove sleeping, eating, and work time, though I know that many people are at their screens 24/7.) Certainly not enough to justify buying it based on energy costs alone.

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    4. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      I agree with this... I also did the calculations and the power savings do not really justify the higher costs for the LCD screens.

      Right now I have two 19inch screens, they cost me about $133.144 per year in electricity. LCD screens would cost me about $43.574 per year. Saving me about $89 per year. Given that CRT screens are about $250-290, and LCDs are $760-790. It's not really worth it.

      Darn!

    5. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by Ralph+Wiggam · · Score: 1

      CRTs do use more juice than LCD screens. But your home electricity usage is dominated by your air conditioning. Turning your thermostat down two degrees will save more eletricity than than any LCD could in 100 years.

      Do an experiment. Turn everything in your house off and go find the electricity meter. Turn on each thing in your house individually and check the speed of the dial in the meter for each one. An electric dryer sucks down juice, but it's only in use a fraction of the ammount of time your A/C is.

      -B

    6. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      How much does it cost to replace the backlight in that low energy LCD, that is even if it can be replaced.

      LCD tv will not last near as long as a CRT display.

    7. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by neomac · · Score: 1

      IANAA (accountant), but that's only the first year's savings. You have to amortize it over the expected lifetime of the monitor. Six years is not an unrealistic expectation for a monitor lifespan, and it'll be less than that as energy prices rise.

      It really comes down to out-of-pocket expense. I don't have the $800, no matter how much I can save on energy.

    8. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Keep in mind that LCDs put out less heat, thus replacing your CRT with an LCD would be like turning up your thermostat a couple degrees.

    9. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bah.. those Apex TVs are great. I have a 32", and man alive, it's got a great picture, with a ton of inputs. Side by side with a sony trinitron, the sony wins, but not by enough to justify the price difference.

    10. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think that LCD screens are going to last the six years you quote or as long as a CRT (a proven technology). So is the extra money worth it? No. Because I'll have to buy a new screen or worse(!) have to deal with dead pixels sprinkled randomly on my screen.

    11. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by wiredog · · Score: 1

      If you can get 5 years use out of them, it's pretty much break even.

    12. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      Do an experiment. Turn everything in your house off and go find the electricity meter. Turn on each thing in your house individually and check the speed of the dial in the meter for each one

      There a few websites (check out section three) out there that tell you how to use your electric meter (assuming it's an analog type with dials) to figure out how much power you are using at any given time. I can't use this at my house because I have a digital meter (LCD display only -- no wheel or dials) but it seems logical.

      It basically means finding out the "Kh factor" on your meter (it should be printed on the faceplate somewhere) and counting how many seconds it takes for the wheel to make one complete revolution. Then use the following formula: (((3.6 x Kh factor) / seconds) x 1000). That'll give you an approximation of how many watts of power your house is using at any one moment. If you are a true geek or have nothing better to do you can turn off everything in the house and turn items on one at a time to figure out how much they draw -- or drop the $40 on a meter such as this one.

      If you really want to get detailed you can start reading your meter and keep a log in a spreadsheet or database. Yes I'm do this -- I'm a geek.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    13. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Keep in mind that LCDs put out less heat, thus replacing your CRT with an LCD would be like turning up your thermostat a couple degrees.

      What do you suppose is more efficient at producing heat for your house? The CRT with the waste heat or the specifically designed for the purpose furnace using natural gas, heating oil or what have you?

      Besides I've seen LCDs that put out quite a bit of heat too -- mainly the ones with internal power supplies (my personal favorite -- who wants a brick lying around?). Some of them put out nearly as much heat as a CRT.

    14. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by 0racle · · Score: 1

      If I get a LCD and it craps out in 5 years or less, there's gonna be hell to pay. For the cost, it should have a life longer then mine. They just don't make them like they used to, we have a stereo receiver here that was apparently the first thing my dad bought when he got a job, its a hell of a lot older then I am and works just as well as it did new. On the other hand, we got a 5 disk CD changer 5~6 years ago, and its had to be replaced already. Cheap parts at a premium price.

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    15. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by aonaran · · Score: 1

      True, I did the same math before I bought my LCD monitor.

      But then I also figured in convenience (I don't need a switch box because the monitor has 2 inputs, one DVI and the other VGA) and health reasons. LCDs don't emit the kind of radiations you get from CRTs, and they are easier on the eyes, especially when used in a room that has florescent lighting. I've replaced all but one light bulb in my house (a tri-light lamp that just wouldn't work with the flourescent tri-light bulbs) with compact flourescent light bulbs... that DOES help with energy savings.

    16. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by aonaran · · Score: 1

      For those intersted My energy consumption went from an average of 22kWh/day to 14kWh/day (that's only 420kWh/month in a 30 day month)

      At Ontario's current rate of 4.3 cents per kWh that's a monthly savings of $10.32

      $125.56 /year.... that more than pays for the more expensive bulbs. When the price freeze ends and energy costs go up I'll be saving even more.

      Anyway, to bring this back on topic, if you can comfortably replace a 60W bulb in your computer room with a 15W florescent I think that the value of the LCD in terms of energy savings goes up significantly.

    17. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by wiredog · · Score: 1

      The receiver (I have a 20 year old Radio Shack one that still works) has few moving parts. Probably only the volume knob and the buttons. The CD changer has lots of moving parts. Small ones that move at high speed. 5-6 years is pretty good, considering that you probably didn't do any maintenance (greasing gears (not that you can, but in theory), blowing dust off of it, etc.) on it.

    18. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by crawling_chaos · · Score: 1
      we have a stereo receiver here that was apparently the first thing my dad bought when he got a job, its a hell of a lot older then I am and works just as well as it did new. On the other hand, we got a 5 disk CD changer 5~6 years ago, and its had to be replaced already. Cheap parts at a premium price.

      How many moving parts are in that receiver? I'm guessing not many, and those it does have (volume knobs and selector switches) aren't used that much. Do you still have the turntable your father purchased with that receiver? Has it ever been serviced?

      --
      You can only drink 30 or 40 glasses of beer a day, no matter how rich you are.
      -- Colonel Adolphus Busch
    19. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by metamatic · · Score: 1

      If you live somewhere hot, remember to try to factor in the money you no longer need to spend on air conditioning to keep the room cool when it has the monitor in.

      Of course, if you live somewhere cold, the reverse applies...

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    20. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by 0racle · · Score: 1

      Do you still have the turntable your father purchased with that receiver?
      I don't know if it was purchased at the same time, but it was within a few years of the receiver, yes we still have it and it too works great. This stuff has got to be approaching 25~30 years old now, they're Phillips branded stuff if you were wondering.

      Has it ever been serviced?
      I do not believe that it ever has, it just kept working. He is very pleased with it, so I think he would have mentioned it.

      We have also been through 3 coffee makers in the past 2 years, on was a wedding gift for my parents, the other 2 were replacements when it died and they only lasted a year each.

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    21. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by getnate · · Score: 1

      Also remember you dont need as much heating in the winter.

    22. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by UrgleHoth · · Score: 1

      Well, if we are into serious bean counting, then how about the additional load that the heat of a CRT places on air conditioning vs LCD if you live in a hot climate or a sealed building.
      In winter, though, its nice. I can warm my hands over the top of the monitor.

      --

      Dogma - "let's just say we'd like to avoid any empirical entanglements."
    23. Re:They underestimated the price/size/quality. by Tingler · · Score: 1

      I found a rather usful device that call tell you how much enegry each of your devices is using.

      It's called a Kill-a-Watt.

      Here is a link to a review:

      Kill-a-Watt

  10. Still waiting... by aquadood · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I purchased my first 15" LCD monitor over 2 years ago, and I'm still shocked how the prices have not changed all that much from then. Any price drop to get me a new 19" LCD is more than welcome with me.

    1. Re:Still waiting... by moonbender · · Score: 1

      I don't really agree; prices have changed a lot. These days you get good 17" LCDs and sometimes not-so-good 19" LCDs for the price of a normal 15" LCD two years ago (something like 400 to 500 Euros). Plus the quality has increased a great deal, two years ago LCDs (arguably) fit for gaming were rare, now they're the norm. The same goes for the other specs like viewing angle and contrast.

      They're still quite expensive, though, and I don't think I'll buy one as long as my CRT works.

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
  11. What does it mean? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    the apparent failure of LCD TVs to make a major market impact and what it means for you. Specifically for us geeks it means cheaper cellular phones and laptops due to an oversupply of LCD manufacturing.

    Hmmm, oversupply of lcd manuf due to lack of interest in lcd tv's? Sounds like it means that cell phones with 15" lcd's will be on the market soon. Now you can really see how crappy your cell phone camera is.

  12. What impact were they expecting? by sxltrex · · Score: 4, Informative

    At >$5,000 for a 40" LCD TV, exactly what market impact were they expecting? There are not too many folks out there with that kind of disposable income. I'd love to have a large, widescreen LCD TV, but I'm waiting for a good quality 42" model for $3,000. If another technology wins out because the LCD TVs can't find the right price/performance ratio, that's fine. It doesn't change the amount I have to spend on toys.

    1. Re:What impact were they expecting? by JawzX · · Score: 1

      As far as the "good quality 42" goes, have you seen the Panasonic 42" ED plasma? I know, I know, plasma has long-term issues, but the out of the box performance on the TH-42PD25 852x480 panel is impressive at it's current sub $3200 price-point.

      ATSC tuner, HDMI, and plain AWSOME picture. Sure it's not REALLY HiDef, but damn it looks good!

    2. Re:What impact were they expecting? by base_chakra · · Score: 2, Funny

      For years now we've been hearing that increased production volumes and market competition would drive down prices (oh, like the compact disc market?). Needless to say that the price drops have been less than phenomenal.

      As a funny aside, a recent episode of the hilarious Scottish TV comedy Still Game had Winston shopping for LCD televisions. After finding that they cost about £2000 more than the £80 he expected, he mail-orders one of those DIY projection TV kits, which summarily sets his living room on fire.

    3. Re:What impact were they expecting? by LetterJ · · Score: 2, Informative

      Exactly. I find it strange that a general public who wasn't willing to pony up $2000 for 50" rear projection TV's which we've had a while, is expected to fall all over themselves to pay $5000 for 40" LCD Tv's. Or people who've gotten used to $300 27" CRT TV's are suddently supposed to be excited about paying $800 for a 19" LCD widescreen?

    4. Re:What impact were they expecting? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      don't forget -- the Sony Walkman (tm) cost $150+ back in the 80's (assuming ~3%/year inflation, that's close to $300(current U$D).

    5. Re:What impact were they expecting? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm waiting for a good quality 42" model for $3,000.

      They do have this... it's called EDTV plasma.

      Still higher resolution than normal tv, but lower resolution than HDTV. I heard Gateway sold these very well.

    6. Re:What impact were they expecting? by Idarubicin · · Score: 1
      For years now we've been hearing that increased production volumes and market competition would drive down prices (oh, like the compact disc market?).

      It should be noted that the compact disc market is decidedly different. (Music) CDs are not commodities--their value depends in part on which music is on them. For any given album, there is a single, monopoly supplier. If Sony or BMG will sell CDs to stores for $14 apiece, then there won't be any (new) CDs for sale for less than that amount. (Loss leaders and other quirks of the market notwithstanding.)

      Looking at the music CD market in general, it's pretty much an oligopoly--a small number of players can control the price of most of the albums sold. Once again, prices won't fall in such a situation, because there isn't sufficient competition.

      LCD monitors, on the other hand, can become a commodity. Aside from potential patent encumbrances, all the major electronics manufacturers are free to produce them, so the price should continue to fall. (Then again, building a manufacturing facility is a big overhead cost, which represents a significant barrier to entry in the market...)

      --
      ~Idarubicin
    7. Re:What impact were they expecting? by ftzdomino · · Score: 1

      $3,000 is also a lot to spend on a TV.

    8. Re:What impact were they expecting? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Best buy sells a zenith 44" lcd tv..
      looks really nice, works really well..
      I walked out with one for 2100$usd by using a 10% coupon I found on the net...

  13. Repairing/Replacing LCD Screens by goldspider · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When is this going to become a viable reality? I really hate knowing that I will have to replace my laptop (column of damaged pixels), because there is no justifiably-priced means to simply replace the screen.

    Perhaps a market for aftermarket LCD screens could taqake advantage of the surplus.

    --
    "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    1. Re:Repairing/Replacing LCD Screens by mopslik · · Score: 1

      no justifiably-priced means to simply replace the screen

      If you're in no rush, scan eBay for "parts" laptops. Once in a while, you can find your model with a broken motherboard/case/hard-drive/etc. If all you're after is the LCD, it's a good place to try. Most laptop manufacturers have repair manuals buried somewhere on their sites.

      Of course, having said that, the screen is usually the thing that's broken in 90% of eBay auctions...

    2. Re:Repairing/Replacing LCD Screens by anocelot · · Score: 1
      When is this going to become a viable reality?

      Well, if you really want to see the price drop dramatically, just buy one. As my good friend Murphy will attest, you'll see a dramatic price drop the day after your "30-day-we'll-beat-any-price" guarentee runs out.

      --
      This tagline brought to you by 1500 monkeys in just under 17 years.
    3. Re:Repairing/Replacing LCD Screens by GoRK · · Score: 1

      You can try EarthLCD to find a replacement panel, or alternatively, you can search ebay for the model number of the panel in your laptop. I have repaired about 5 laptop screens at very reasonable cost by buying panels from ebay.

  14. Computer of the future by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, I've been noticing stories mysteriously disappear for a few months now.

  15. Re:At the risk of being modded offtopic... by rueger · · Score: 1

    Just a guess, but it was more a Photoshopped image of the future. Didn't that big ol' Electrohome hanging from the ceiling look just a tad suspect?

  16. Laptop prices affected? by kbahey · · Score: 1

    I am not in the market for a cell phone, nor an LCD monitor.

    But I would be very interested if this lowered the prices for laptops.

    However, laptop prices depend on many other things (being a business tool for managers and such, rather than a consumer one, other expensive components, the aura of commanding a premium on the price, ...etc.)

  17. The day I upgrade... by British · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...from my 17 inch CRT to an LCD is when it offers a higher resolution, at a low price. Right now all the LCD monitors I see offer nothing in terms of "upgrades" to resolution, etc. I can't justify spending $300 to get some room behind my monitor that was otherwise not there and to have to downgrade resolutions. Its not like I'll find some use for new space behind a new LCD monitor, and my computer desk wouldn't work with said LCD on a wall.

    1. Re:The day I upgrade... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I upgraded to save my vision, and wish I'd done it 3 or 4 years earlier.

      When I became a programmer, I had a VERY nice Samsung 17" CRT. As my vision got a little worse, I had to lean in closer to see better, and my vision quickly spiraled downward to the point I needed glasses.

      I attribute the rapid and growing decline of my vision completely to the radiation put off by CRT's (it's massive and very destructive when shooting you right in the head from close range).

      After spiraling downward 3 or 4 years in a row, I switched to a dual LCD setup and my prescription hasn't changed since.

    2. Re:The day I upgrade... by Xugumad · · Score: 1

      I think this is a good point. I love LCDs, but that's because I live in a small flat (if laptops were good at gaming, I wouldn't even have a full size PC, to save space).

      [Insert rant about the UK housing market and, despite working full time as a developer, having to share a 2 bedroom flat to make ends meet]

      I haven't replaced the TV yet, but that's more because I don't watch enough TV to make it worthwhile, than anything else.

      Back to the topic at hand, if the space isn't important to you, there's very little reason to change from CRT to LCD (I happen to think they're more aesthetically pleasing, but that's hardly a reason).

    3. Re:The day I upgrade... by Dusabre · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't buy a LCD TV, the prices are absurd - even compared to LCD monitors. A LCD costs on average 2 times more than a monitor.

      On the other hand, LCD monitor prices are not insane compared to CRT prices. A 15" LCD monitor has a screen comparable in size (from a user perspective) to a 17" CRT so that's the comparison that should be made as regards price. I went from 17" inch CRT to 15" LCD with no ill effect. A LCD monitor has no glare - very easy on the eyes. A LCD monitor has gorgeous crisp colours. A LCD monitor is flat. Add a DVD drive or TV card and you've got a LCD television. You're paying a premium for one but its worth it.

      I've noticed that high-end computer equipment has commodity prices. An excellent sound system for a computer system will cost 5 times less than the same but with a hi-fi label.

    4. Re:The day I upgrade... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I upgraded from a 17" Panasonic flat screen, anti-glare CRT to a 15" no-name LCD about five years ago.

      As a migraine sufferer I consider it an upgrade because compared to the CRT (at whatever refresh rate) there's absolutely zero flicker and zero glare.

      I'd never go back to any type of CRT monitor now, regardless of price/size/refresh rate.

      Plus there's the added bonus of zero radiation.

    5. Re:The day I upgrade... by roach2002 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I just bought a Dell 1701 FP (17" LCD). I had a Samsung 955DF (19" CRT). I was planning on running a dual monitor setup, but I realized how horrible the CRT was next to the LCD and sold the CRT. The CRT lacked crispness and brightness. I didn't even want to just have my playlist on the second monitor. Granted, the monitor was 2 years old and I didn't have it on the highest resolution.


      If you stare at a $500 monitor for 4 hours a day, 365 days a year, for 2 years, it costs $.17 an hour. The difference is amazing.

    6. Re:The day I upgrade... by smithmc · · Score: 1

      ...from my 17 inch CRT to an LCD is when it offers a higher resolution, at a low price. Right now all the LCD monitors I see offer nothing in terms of "upgrades" to resolution, etc.

      I wish that they'd sell desktop monitors with the same resolution that you can get in notebook displays. I've got two at home and one at work, all with 15-inch 1600x1200 panels. Holy crap, are they gorgeous. 133 dpi (17.8K pixels per square inch!) plus anti-aliased fonts equals almost print-quality text. Meanwhile, the highest-resolution desktop 15" LCD you can get is 1024x768, a whopping 85 dpi (7.3K pixels per square inch, less than half as many). To get 1600x1200, you have to get a 20". Argh.

      --
      Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
    7. Re:The day I upgrade... by tarsi210 · · Score: 1

      Man...either you have different visual needs than I or that Dell FP is really nice. (I suspect the former.) I haven't met a FP that beats a CRT yet.

      I, too, currently run a Samsung 955DF and love it. They tried to upgrade it to a FP earlier in the year and I told them exactly where they could stick it; I've seen the displays on the secretaries and other people in the office that use them because they "give back my desktop space", and they're awful. I have to spend 9 - 10 hours a day staring at the screen, I don't need something that scours my eyeballs.

    8. Re:The day I upgrade... by imsabbel · · Score: 1

      I guess you have never seen a good tft. I had an eizo 17" and replaced it with an eizo f557. Wanted dual monitor setup. Realized that after watching the tft for an hour, looking back to the crt it was like watching a old tv.
      The crt is now in the attic, maybe soon at ebay. I will NEVER go back to crt, even if it had only half the resolution.

      --
      HI O WISE PRINCE. WHT TOOK U SO DAM LONG?
    9. Re:The day I upgrade... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      I was with you until your last statement.

      Where are you seeing these "excellent" sound systems?

      The good sound gear from Klipsch and the like for computers costs about $300, and it's not anywhere near as good-sounding as the Klipsch home gear (which is indeed more expensive).

      Fortunately, I'm not an audiophile, so I don't spend $300 on my computer speakers. : )

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  18. that's no moon...! by omegacentrix · · Score: 1, Funny

    "it means cheaper cellular phones and laptops"
    "Does this mean I can finally afford that 21" LCD monitor I've always wanted?"

    You really want a cell phone or a laptop with a 21" screen?

  19. That's "take" (self-grammar-nazi) of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They need to make that "Preview" button bigger, just like the warning notices on cigarette packs.

    1. Re:That's "take" (self-grammar-nazi) of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even better, they should remove the Submit button altogether and make previewing mandatory

  20. Smoking and not sharing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    What are you smoking and not sharing?

    You can routinely find 17" LCD's for $320.

    Now that I've switched to LCD's, I'll NEVER go back to CRT's.

    Besides, a 19" CRT has a viewable area not much bigger than a 17" LCD.

    My eyes definitely prefer the LCD. I'm convinced I wouldn't need glasses if I'd switched to LCD's 3 or 4 years earlier (my vision spiraled downward rapidly after I became a programmer).

    1. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by Cheesy+Fool · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      > What are you smoking and not sharing?

      He obviously isn't running Linux.

      --

      Hail to the king, baby!
    2. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by strictfoo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The problem is that I need the real estate provided by a 19in CRT running at 1600x1200. A 17in LCD at 1280x1024 just doesn't cut it.

      A decent 20in LCD that gives you 1600x1200 is, what, $700-$800 at least.

      So, a good/very good 19in CRT for $250-$300 or a decent 20in LCD for $700-$800 (yes, I understand the screen will actually be bigger, but they are both running at the same resolution and that's what really matters).

      Until the prices come down, I won't be making the switch.

      --
      I've just signed legislation that'll outlaw Russia forever. We'll begin bombing in five minutes.
    3. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For some people I can see that ultra-high resolution would be necessary (CAD, etc).

      For anyone that works with text (programmers, etc) or web sites (designing websites at 1600 x 1200 that will be viewed by the majority of people at 800 x 600 or 1024 x 768 is a BIG mistake, all of your text will be HUGE when viewed at these lower resolutions), thie higher resolutions actually become a downside, rather than an upside.

      I just bought a laptop that's 1680 x 1050, and the text is so freaking small I can barely read it without climbing on top of the keyboard.

      So for me, for now, 1280 x 1024 is the sweet spot.

    4. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by attam · · Score: 2, Funny

      I need the real estate provided by a 19in CRT running at 1600x1200. A 17in LCD at 1280x1024 just doesn't cut it

      you are forgetting the first rule of lcd purchasing... why buy 1 when you can get 2 for twice the price!

    5. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Why not set up dual monitors if space is what you want. You can get an nvidia gpu for $50 that lets you use dual monitors (even in linux) very easily, and you won't ever go back. It's great to be able to read data from one page while working on another instead of shuffling windows around all the time.

      But now I want 3 monitors :(

    6. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For about $2,000 you can get a complete computer with a 20" widescreen display at 1680 by 1050. Details here.

    7. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by strictfoo · · Score: 1

      I have dual monitors. A 19 CRT (at 1600x1200) and a 17 CRT (at 1156x864). If/when I do decide to go with LCDs I'm actually leaning towards 3 decent/good 17in LCDs.

      --
      I've just signed legislation that'll outlaw Russia forever. We'll begin bombing in five minutes.
    8. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 1
      The problem is that I need the real estate provided by a 19in CRT running at 1600x1200. A 17in LCD at 1280x1024 just doesn't cut it.

      They way OS X is already, and the way Windows and Gnome are going, higher res won't mean more 'real estate' -- it'll just mean more crispness.

      Besides, what do you think virtual desktops are for?

      --
      Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
    9. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And it runs Doom3 just great! Oh wait, it's a Mac. Better stick to publishing.

    10. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by strictfoo · · Score: 1

      Virtual desktops are for people who either have no room for multiple monitors or have no money for multiple monitors.

      --
      I've just signed legislation that'll outlaw Russia forever. We'll begin bombing in five minutes.
    11. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      Think of it this way.

      In 3 years my 2 17" LCD's will pay for themselves in the power consumption compared to the pair of 19: CRT's.

      Although I live semi-off grid. I can power up my PC and LCD monitors and not trigger a need to use main's power on a cloudy day. my dual Viewsonic 19" CRT's?? I need an extra 400 watts and that was more than enough to start using mains power and therefore costing me money.

      swtiching all PC's in the house to LCD, lowering the processor speeds (Yes downgrading) and component counts (I went from 8 SCSI U160's, A P-42.8Extreme in my computer to 1 SATA 200gig and a P4-M 1.8 and dropped my power use from 500 watts to 110 watts on the PC alone.)

      I can still play UT2004 just fine and the internet and other tasks other than gaming is just as fast.

      and it allowed me to save $4700.00 on buying a 4th solar panel.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    12. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by chez69 · · Score: 1

      I develop software on a 22" monitor running at 1920 X 1440 and I love it.

      1600 X 1200 is too small to develop in =-)

      --
      PHP is the solution of choice for relaying mysql errors to web users.
    13. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by Forbman · · Score: 1

      ...or who find multiple monitors slightly annoying, like me.

      LiteStep on Windows is working fine for me.

      Sure, it's nice to see side-by-side, but for the most part, it's kind of nice.

    14. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by ZenShadow · · Score: 1

      It's not a question of nice or not nice, it's a question of productivity. My multi-mon setup saves me truckloads of time that would otherwise be spent searching for windows.

      Of course, I also use virtual desktops on the multi-monitor setup...

      --ZS

      --
      -- sigs cause cancer.
    15. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by Cheesy+Fool · · Score: 1

      Check the sig of the parent post you replied to.

      --

      Hail to the king, baby!
    16. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Although I live semi-off grid.

      You're not married, are you?

    17. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by really? · · Score: 1

      Been there, done that. Would never go back to a "standard" setup. Mind you, I don't do games, so even "cheap" LCDs are aceptable. There are some people better served by one BIG display, but I think most of us would be better served by multiple smaller displays. YMMV and all that.

      --

      "Consistency is contrary to nature, contrary to life. The only completely consistent people are the dead." A. Huxley
    18. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 1

      I run my house off of power generated from the grid turning a motor, which turns a generator, which turns a motor, which turns a generator, which turns a motor, which turns a generator, which turns a motor, which turns a generator, which turns a motor, which turns a generator, which turns a motor, which turns a generator, which turns a motor, which turns a generator, which turns a motor, which turns a generator, which turns a motor, which turns a generator. Changing from CRT to LCD saved me nearly 5 million dollars in power bills. Everyone should switch to LCD. Seriously man, don't say that "it allowed me to save $4700.00 on buying a 4th solar panel." if you actually have on-grid power available in your area. The $4700 would not have been something the CRT and faster computer setup cost you, it would have been something your hippy ideals cost you. Also, "I need an extra 400 watts and that was more than enough to start using mains power and therefore costing me money." I have a problem with this statement. You act like using the solar panels doesn't cost you money and yet using the main would break the bank. Shortly after we get the gem, "and it allowed me to save $4700.00 on buying a 4th solar panel," implying you've already laid down 14 grand on this thing... free.. pfft. Look at the total costs of ownership of these solar panels... while yes they may seem pay off in the long run, with the rate at which they are getting cheaper and cheaper, if you just switched to the low power setup and stayed on the main for power you could probably wait til you've spent half that 14k on power bills and then buy equivilent panels for 1/4th the cost, nearly netting you that 5k you were whining about.

      --

      --

      WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
    19. Re:Smoking and not sharing... by chicks.net · · Score: 1

      I find that two 19" monitors both at 1280x1024 helps me wait for the decent sized LCD prices to come down.

      --

      --
      Free software isn't free, but expensive software is expensive.

  21. That would be one hell of a belt clip. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Wouldn't a phone with a 21" display be a bit cumbersome?

    On the other hand...

    "What's that in your pocket?"

    "Twenty-one inches of pure happiness! Want to see it?"

    1. Re:That would be one hell of a belt clip. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, your mom could fit it in her back pocket.

    2. Re:That would be one hell of a belt clip. by karnal · · Score: 1

      "What's that in your pocket?"

      Somethin' that'll cripple your sister.

      {badder santa outtake}

      --
      Karnal
  22. Most likely a fake by kbahey · · Score: 1

    And the steering wheel! That was never in any computer, business or home.

    Looks suspect alright.

  23. Re:Does the LCD account for a big chunk of the pri by Liselle · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What I've always been told about LCD tech (someone correct me if I am wrong) is that there is a reason why high-res LCD is so expensive: dead pixels. There are only so many that can be tolerated before the panel is useless, and they have to start over. The screens for phones are tiny, the chance of getting an unacceptable number of dead pixels (and increasing cost) is small.

    --
    Auto-reply to ACs: "Truly, you have a dizzying intellect."
  24. it doesn't work that way.. by Suppafly · · Score: 1

    Somehow I don't think it's as easy as turning unused tv lcd producing factories into monitor and cell phone producing factories, but I may be wrong.

    1. Re:it doesn't work that way.. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The difference between an LCD TV and a LCD Monitor is the logic board stuck to the back of the panel, or even connected to it with a flexible circuit. Sometimes they handle NTSC video, for example; sometimes VGA or DVI-Analog; sometimes DVI-D. That and the buttons/display on the front panel (I'd hope that a LCD TV would use OSD, though) are the only real difference. In fact most LCD Monitors are designed such that they can have different boards fitted to them without case modification, so they can use one case and panel for an assortment of products (for example, panels which support more of the above inputs.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:it doesn't work that way.. by shess · · Score: 1

      The difference between an LCD TV and a LCD Monitor is the logic board stuck to the back of the panel, or even connected to it with a flexible circuit.

      I'm sorry, but I'm not really interested in a 26" 1024x768 computer display. I want a 20" 1600x1200 display. How does a new logic board address that?

    3. Re:it doesn't work that way.. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      There are high native resolution LCD TVs and low native resolution LCD Monitors. Specious argument, meet the real world. Thank you, please drive through.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  25. LCD prices by osu-neko · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It seems to me this may be good for the short-term, but it's bad for the long term. Things become cheap (a stable cheap, not a short term cheap) because they're produced in massive quantities. If LCD TV's actually took off, you're see dramatically lower prices in LCD monitors over the long term. If LCD screens stay confined to the computer market, and don't become mainstream there, they'll remain relatively expensive over the long term. So this looks like bad news to me...

    --
    "Convictions are more dangerous enemies of truth than lies."
    1. Re:LCD prices by umshaggy · · Score: 1

      At the current penetration levels of computers into the home, I don't see a huge difference between the markets. I don't know anyone who doesn't have at least one computer for every television in their home. For families, you will often have a single TV, but several computers. If you factor in the corporate world, where most cube farms have a computer or two in every cube, and zero TVs, I would say the computer display market isn't that far behind the tv market (plus, most replace computer displays more often than TVs because TVs generally last longer).

      --
      Did you buy a Neuros today?
    2. Re:LCD prices by Queer+Boy · · Score: 1
      If LCD screens stay confined to the computer market, and don't become mainstream there, they'll remain relatively expensive over the long term.

      I don't buy this because high-resolution CRT's came down in price and are STILL only used in computer monitors. I have a CRT and an LCD and I prefer to watch DVD's on the CRT because the LCD shows too many of the MPEG artifacts on low-quality compressed DVDs, and too much of the film grain on high-quality compressed DVDs.

      The problem with all this tech in the consumer realm (which I have argued with sales people when they tried to sell me HDTV) is that nothing is recorded in high enough resolution to make displaying it in high resolution mean anything. It's like transferring an audio cassette to CD. The qulaity of the recording still sucks.

      None of this tech will make a difference until movies and television shows are filmed/recorded in higher resolution.

      --
      Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
  26. How bout cheap DIGITAL displays? by caveat · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I've been looking at 17" LCDs quite a bit lately, but all the inexpensive ones only have analog in - sort of defeats the purpose. I'd really like a 17" Apple LCD to match my G4, but those are still going for ~500 on ebay. Anybody know of any sub-$400, 17" LCDs with digital inputs?

    --

    Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored. - Aldous Huxley
    1. Re:How bout cheap DIGITAL displays? by SLot · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You can get a NEC/Mitsubishi LCD 1760VM-BK-1 with analog and DVI interfaces for $466.

      The Samsung Syncmaster 910T is $545 at NewEgg.

    2. Re:How bout cheap DIGITAL displays? by hsoft · · Score: 1

      That is exactly what I'm looking for too. And as you say, most 17" LCD screens have no DVI input. I will probably buy the dell 17" ultrasharp, which is now at 700$ CAN and looks good (and has DVI input).

      --
      perception is reality
    3. Re:How bout cheap DIGITAL displays? by Nursie · · Score: 1

      I just picked up an LG L1710B in the UK for 233 pounds - 417 dollars according to xe.com.

      Unfortunately it seems to be over 500 dollars from US stores.

    4. Re:How bout cheap DIGITAL displays? by hibiki_r · · Score: 1

      Most LCD manufacturers have slightly pricier LCD monitors with DVI interfaces. The problem is that most retail stores don't carry those models. In many locations, the only way you can buy one of those models is to buy online. Most online stores I've seen refuse LCD returns if they have any less than 6-12 dead pixels, while local stores accept returns for pretty much any reason.

      At least 80% of the video cards you can buy in retail stores have a DVI output. Why don't these stores carry the DVI enabled version of the monitors they already have in stock?

    5. Re:How bout cheap DIGITAL displays? by chefmonkey · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Have you looked at an LCD monitor hooked up to an analog output? I have a couple at home (1024 x 768), and can't tell the difference from an equivalent laptop screen. There's no bleeding over from one pixel to the next, and response time is up there with every other LCD screen I've ever seen.

      Next time you find yourself in Fry's or an equivalent store, seek out the analog LCD screens, and try to find some quality difference between them and the digital screens. You'll probably be surprised.

    6. Re:How bout cheap DIGITAL displays? by caveat · · Score: 1

      I have done this, both at the stores and on friend's systems doing all sorts of things, and there is a distinct difference, or perhaps I should say I notice one, and it's more than subjective judgement. The colors tend to be a bit sharper and more even, and there's a VERY noticeable change with games (well, Ghost Recon at least - had a chance to play it on an analog LCD on a PC vs. a Apple 17", both 1280x1024...night and day). Don't even get me started on the image quality on the SGI 1600SW flatpanels I used in college, omfg...

      --

      Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored. - Aldous Huxley
  27. And they will keep dropping by auzy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    With the advent of new technologies like OLED screens, amongst other things, I'm surprised companies aren't eager to release them.

    One reason I'd imagine there are so many LCD's overstocked is that LCD screens might have nice refresh rates, but the monitors which dont suffer excessive blurring which is bad for gamers, tend to be the ones which cost a few grand. And while LCD screens best benefit the development of large monitors, large LCD monitors cost so much barely anyone has one these days (I still know people using ancient 15" CRT monitors.. I'm one of them).

    Maybe if they helped companies like Nvidia to work on algorithms which would help reduce the blurring effect by adjusting the brightness of a colour which only gets drawn for a milisecond to help reduce the blurring), or something better, it could give them a killer market.. Every gamer on the block would want one.

    Personally, the dead pixel problems some of the Manufacturers have on their monitors is one thing that makes me highly cautious about the cheap LCD screens

    1. Re:And they will keep dropping by clem9796 · · Score: 1

      I can't remember specifically, but the screens are given a class depending on how many pixels are dead are they not? A "Class A" screen has less than X percent of dead pixels from the factory then going down in classes from there. So pay attention to that aspect when buying any screen from any manufacturer.

      Also consider in regular projection televisions, Hitachi makes 70% of the light guns on the market with differing qualities going to cheaper TV's, so when you're buying a Projo TV, it's probably got Hitachi parts in it.

      --
      IANALOOA
    2. Re:And they will keep dropping by kmo · · Score: 1
      Maybe if they helped companies like Nvidia to work on algorithms which would help reduce the blurring effect by adjusting the brightness of a colour which only gets drawn for a milisecond to help reduce the blurring), or something better, it could give them a killer market.. Every gamer on the block would want one.

      The blurring you see on most LCDs when gaming or showing movies is a result of the pixel response time. LCDs can only respond so fast to changes. A typical response time for LCDs is 25ms, which is about twice the speed of a CRT. Newer LCDs have improved noticably. 16ms response times are available from many monitor manufacturers and virtually eliminate the ghosting/blurring. I never see the LCD TV specs quote the pixel response time, but I wouldn't buy one slower than 16ms.

  28. Re:gmail invites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Parent post is not work safe

  29. Now don't get all excited by DaoudaW · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is _normal_. New technology is always relatively expensive and many manufacturers try to get in on the ground floor to capture market-share and enjoy the relatively large per unit gross profit. Then, whoops, we've made too many, there's a market glut, inventories are growing, gotta mov'em out so drop the price and oh, there _are_ a lot of consumers out there who'll buy them at the new improved price, so more get manufactured, economies of scale take the price even lower, and the cycle continues.

    Happens every time....

    1. Re:Now don't get all excited by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

      "Happens every time"

      Except when it comes to CDs

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    2. Re:Now don't get all excited by Detritus · · Score: 1

      It did happen to the cost of manufacturing a CD.

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
  30. Televisions go flat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    As it happens, The Economist recently ran an article addressing some of these issues, particularly the "bang for the buck" of LCDs versus other display technologies. The article also provides context and perspective that should be of interest to those participating in this discussion. For convenience, the full text is reproduced below; it is also accessible online (may require paid subscription).

    ----

    RATIONAL CONSUMER

    Televisions go flat

    Sep 16th 2004
    From The Economist print edition

    Consumer electronics: TVs based on bulky cathode-ray tubes are giving way to flat-panel models. How will the market evolve?

    [Image]

    TELEVISIONS, it seems, can never be too wide or too thin--and increasingly, they are wide and thin at the same time, thanks to the growing popularity of flat-panel televisions based on plasma and liquid-crystal display (LCD) technology. Flat-panel TVs are stylish, do not take up much room, and do justice to the crystal-clear images produced by DVD players, digital-cable boxes and games consoles. Sales of LCD TVs in particular are expected to account for an ever larger portion of the market (see chart) as consumers embrace these new technologies at the expense of bulky models based on old-fashioned cathode-ray tubes (CRTs). LCD-based models are expected to account for 18% of televisions sold in 2008, up from just 2.2% in 2003, according to iSuppli, a market-research firm.

    LCD TVs are the latest example of a technology from the computer industry causing a stir in consumer electronics. For years, anyone who wanted to buy a flat-panel television had to buy a plasma screen, a large and expensive (a 42-inch model costs around $3,500) option. LCD technology, already used in flat-panel computer monitors and laptop displays, makes possible smaller, more affordable flat-panel TVs: a 17-inch model costs around $800, for example.

    The prospect of a much bigger market has prompted new entrants, including PC-makers such as Dell and HP, and established consumer-electronics firms, such as Motorola and Westinghouse (both of which stopped making TVs decades ago) to start selling televisions alongside the established television-set manufacturers. For PC-makers, which already sell flat-panel monitors, diversifying into TVs is no big leap. For consumer-electronics firms, the appeal of flat-panel TVs is that they offer much higher margins than conventional televisions. During the late-2003 holiday season, makers of flat-panel TVs, both LCD and plasma, succeeded in creating a tremendous buzz around their products, says Riddhi Patel, an analyst at iSuppli.

    But it did not translate into sales to the extent that the manufacturers had hoped. Although more people are now aware of flat-panel TVs, many are still deterred by their high prices. The expense is difficult to justify, particularly since a 30-inch LCD television can cost up to four times as much as a comparable CRT-based model, with no real difference in picture quality.

    Flat-panel TV-makers have now, says Ms Patel, begun to cut their prices. For one thing, they are sitting on a lot of unsold inventory: the panel-makers made too many panels, the TV-makers built too many TVs, and the retailers ordered more than they could sell.

    Prices are also expected to fall as production capacity is stepped up. Sharp opened a new "sixth generation" LCD factory in January. In May, Matsushita, the Japanese firm behind the Panasonic brand, announced that it would build the world's biggest plasma-display factory. And in July, Sony and Samsung announced that their joint-venture, a "seventh-generation" LCD factory at Tangjung in South Korea, would start operating next year. There is concern that this year's record investment in LCD plants could lead to overcapacity next year. For consumers, however, this is all g

  31. Re:At the risk of being modded offtopic... by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

    Well, it finally happened. I've been modded offtopic.

    Didn't that big ol' Electrohome hanging from the ceiling look just a tad suspect?

    Other than the fact that it was hanging crooked? No. I figured that they added it because the computer would integrate with home entertainment. i.e. The computer could accept tapes similar to the ones that Mr. Spock used to plug in.

    Just a guess, but it was more a Photoshopped image of the future.

    Maybe you're right. Who knows. It certainly *looks* like something they might have "dreamed up". Just like the Hydrogen-powered 747s that Popular Science was promising a few years back. ;-)

  32. Huge Margins by vasqzr · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The margins on the larger LCD TV's are HUGE.

    A friend of mine works at Sears, doing commission sales on home entertainment products. He'll make $300+ on the sale of 1 big LCD TV

    1. Re:Huge Margins by Slicebo · · Score: 1

      Actually, the margins can't be very big, or they start to reduce the usable size of the screen. A one-inch margin on a 17" screen would. . .

      Hmh? Beg your pardon?

      Oh. PROFIT margin.

      Ah.

      Never mind.

  33. Re:Speaking of LCDs... -- 25% off? by scovetta · · Score: 1

    25% off coupon?

    Where at?

    --
    Wer mit Ungeheuern kämpft, mag zusehn, dass er nicht dabei zum Ungeheuer wird. --Nietzsche
  34. You can't buy LCDs from newegg by ivan256 · · Score: 1

    I love NewEgg, and I buy a ton of stuff from them. They're only slightly more expensive than the cheapest you can find, and they're super reliable. You can't buy LCDs from the though, and here's why:

    Dead Pixels Policy: Replacement or Refund for 8 or more DEAD PIXELS ONLY!

    I don't know about you, but even one dead pixel is unacceptable.

    1. Re:You can't buy LCDs from newegg by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      Most places will only replace for six anyway. So it's not like they are totally out of line there. I don't know where you expect to get replacement for 1.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    2. Re:You can't buy LCDs from newegg by Erwos · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "I don't know about you, but even one dead pixel is unacceptable."

      I used to think this, too, until I got a tablet with _one_ dead pixel. It's only 10 inches and 800x600, too, so "one dead pixel" is 1/800(600) of the display, rather than 1/(1600)(1200) of the screen you'd have with a large LCD. Yes, the screen is smaller, but you get the point.

      I would NEVER have noticed it unless my parents had pointed it out. Frankly, one dead pixel isn't really that big a deal - maybe you've had experiences otherwise with "one dead pixel", though. If you haven't, though, I'd caution you from going a little too crazy on the score.

      -Erwos

      --
      Plausible conjecture should not be misrepresented as proof positive.
    3. Re:You can't buy LCDs from newegg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      That is why you zap the display with some ESD before you ship it back.

      ZAP! lots of dead pixels!

    4. Re:You can't buy LCDs from newegg by Drathos · · Score: 1

      In some cases, Newegg's policy is better than the manufacturer. Samsung's policy for 17-19 inch LCDs is 10 dead pixels. Meanwhile, Viewsonic's policy for the same size range is 7. I seem to recall that there are a couple of manufacturers with a 1-3 pixel range, but that may be for smaller screens.

      I personally agree with you that any dead pixels should be unacceptable, but you won't find any manufacturer with that policy because it's (supposedly) very hard for them to assure that. That being said, I've never had a laptop with any dead pixels in the display.

      --
      End of line..
    5. Re:You can't buy LCDs from newegg by debrain · · Score: 1

      Frankly, one dead pixel isn't really that big a deal - maybe you've had experiences otherwise with "one dead pixel", though.

      It's the bright red always-on ones that make you appreciate Futureshop and Staples' no-questions-asked return policy, though.

    6. Re:You can't buy LCDs from newegg by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      Almost any retail store will take back a monitor for any reason, even one dead pixel.

      Regardless of what most places do, when you buy something it should work completely. They advertize a certain number of pixels and they should all work.

    7. Re:You can't buy LCDs from newegg by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      Sucks when that one dead pixel is always on, and is red, or green, and in the middle of the display.

      It especially sucks when that happens and you didn't buy the display somewhere that takes returns regardless of the number of dead pixels. Many retail stores will take a display back within three days for any reason, including "I didn't like it", as long as it's in it's perfect original condition.

    8. Re:You can't buy LCDs from newegg by mrsev · · Score: 5, Informative

      Ok, ehough speculation. The law is specific as to what contitutes a defective screen. The standard is ISO 13406-2. Toms hardware has a good review on the law. The link is:
      http://graphics.tomshardware.com/display/2003 0319/ index.html

      I suggest you go annd read it but if not...

      In summary: There are 4 grades of LCD.....if they do not meet this standard then you have not bought an "official LCD display" and then it is defective , the official sales policy of the shop is not relevant. Just go and exchage. the rest is toms hardware quotes:

      "Class 1, the highest, allows no defects at all. Class 4, the lowest, allows up to 262!"

      If they do not specify, the monitor is Class 1 by default and you can have it changed at the smallest pixel defect.

      The standard distinguishes four types of defective pixel.

      * Type 1: number of always-lit pixels.
      * Type 2: number of always-unlit pixels.
      * Type 3: other defects, particularly on sub-pixels and the RGB cells making up pixels (lit or unlit). This means red, green and blue pixels lit the whole time. Experience shows that this is undoubtedly the most common defect.

      For 15" LCD Panels
      Native resolution is 1024 x 768 pixels, a total of 786,432 pixels.

      Class 1 panels: this is the easiest - no pixel defects are allowed.

      Class 2 panels are more complicated.

      * Type 1: Lit pixels allowed = 2 x 786,432 / 1,000,000 = 1.57.
      * Type 2: Unlit pixels allowed = 2 x 786,432 / 1,000,000 = 1.57.
      * Type 3: Red, green or blue pixels allowed = 5 x 786,432 / 1,000,000 = 3.93.

      If you refer to the standard, 2 always-lit pixels is >1.57. So this is over the top and the warranty comes into play. 15" ISO 13406-2-compliant panels may not allow more than: Type 1 + Type 2 + Type 3 = 5 defective pixels altogether, with a maximum of one lit, one unlit and three red, green or blue pixels.

      17" Panels:

      This is calculated the same way as for the 15".
      Resolution = 1280 x 1024 = 1,310,720 pixels.

      Class 1 panels: no pixel defects are allowed.

      Class 2 panels:

      * Type 1: Unlit pixels allowed = 2 x 1,310,720 / 1,000,000 = 2.62.
      * Type 2: Lit pixels = 2 x 1,310,720 / 1,000,000 = 2.62.
      * Type 3: Red, green or blue pixels allowed = 5 x 1,310,720 / 1,000,000 = 6.55.

      If you refer to the standard, two always-lit pixels is 3>2.62. So, this is over the limit and the warranty comes into play.

      17" ISO 13406-2-compliant panels may not allow more than: Type 1 + Type 2 + Type 3 = 10 defective pixels altogether, with a maximum of two lit, two unlit and six red, green or blue pixels.

    9. Re:You can't buy LCDs from newegg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I suggest you go annd read it but if not...
      I would, but it doesn't exist.
    10. Re:You can't buy LCDs from newegg by Wanker · · Score: 1
      I love NewEgg, and I buy a ton of stuff from them. They're only slightly more expensive than the cheapest you can find, and they're super reliable. You can't buy LCDs from the though, and here's why:
      I would expand what you said even more. I buy NewEgg all the time, but there are some things I won't buy mail order from ANYONE. They are
      • cases
      • keyboards
      • mice
      • displays
      Perhaps you see the theme? These are mostly items that I interact with directly so they need to fit me perfectly. No specification is going to describe how a mouse feels in my hand, or if the bounce from the keys on the keyboard feel right.

      The one exception is the case. I may not touch a case all the time, but I still need to feel if the stamped metal edges have been properly dulled or if I have a nice knife edge waiting for me. It's also helpful to see how the fans mount, if drive rails are needed, etc.

      Probably the item where I'm the MOST picky is the display. Since quality can vary greatly between individual displays, I make sure to get one of the helpful salespeople to hook up the monitor I'm about to buy to one of their demo PCs. It's amazing how many odd defects monitors can have (both LCD and CRT). Fuzzy picture, misalignment on one side, pixel issues, distortion in small areas, etc.

      Mail order is great, but sometimes it's worth paying 10-20% more to ensure that you get what you want. I bet that 10-20% ends up costing less than repeated return shipping.

    11. Re:You can't buy LCDs from newegg by avdp · · Score: 1

      Everything manufactured has tolerances (you know, plus or minus something). The tighter the tolerance, the more expensive. If you want a perfect product (to the extend that is at all possible) you have two choices:

      1. buy one from a brand that advertise that - you will pay a premium
      2. buy a "normal" one and hope you will get lucky

      As it stand, all the LCD display manufacturers do not consider their product defective if it has a relatively low number of dead pixels (1-8 or so). Which means that Newegg would have to "eat" the costs of the return since they can't in turn pass those on to the manufacturer. A place like BestBuy takes the return no question asked - they eat the costs, which they can afford to do considering that everything they sell is over priced to begin with (not to mantion they'll just repackage it and sell it as new). Newegg can't.

    12. Re:You can't buy LCDs from newegg by Some_Llama · · Score: 1

      "Sucks when that one dead pixel is always on, and is red, or green, and in the middle of the display."

      Can't you just poke the offending pixel with a needle or somthing to make it turn "off"?

      although that might void the overall warranty, I think a single always lit pixel would drive me insane...

      Kind of like that fly that lands on your TV or the smidgen of dust that makes your eye pop straight to it while watching a movie.

    13. Re:You can't buy LCDs from newegg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The law is specific as to what contitutes a defective screen [... lots of drivel deleted]

      Dude just TRY and convince the loser salesdroids at {Best Buy, Future Shop, Macs Whack TV's} of this. I will laugh at you.

    14. Re:You can't buy LCDs from newegg by lxt · · Score: 1

      To back you up - I have had a single dead pixel on my iBook since I bought it (two years ago), which I rarely notice, if at all. Had it been a powerbook, I could probably have got a replacement (Apple being fairly generous in the "dead pixel support" area). As it happened, I ended up with £200 cash, calculated by the value of the laptop (£1000) divided by the number of dead pixels before Apple would replace it. If anyone's interest, the argument I used (and would probably work for other people, certainly in the UK) was that at no point did the retailer I bought it from or Apple state the laptop could have a dead pixel when I bought it. That said, it did take quite a bit of haggling...

    15. Re:You can't buy LCDs from newegg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a 1280 x 1400 screen with a stuck pixel that drives me bonkers. You see it and you see it immediately and I can't see how anybody couldn't notice it.

    16. Re:You can't buy LCDs from newegg by khrtt · · Score: 1

      (not to mention they'll just repackage it and sell it as new)

      I think not. I think, they'll tape it up and sell as "open box - customer return" at about 75% the price, reducing the price further until someone buys it. Which is sorta fair for LCDs with dead pixels.

      Newegg can't do it, but they could put it up on eBay. I bet, even if Newegg doesn't do it, some places would. So, it's a safe bet most LCD monitors on eBay have dead pixels. So, I'm not buying an LCD monitor off eBay. DAMN IT, I'm so logical today!

    17. Re:You can't buy LCDs from newegg by avdp · · Score: 1

      You would think they do, but the truth of the matter if that they don't unless they have to (if the box is damaged, or missing content, or whatever). Read this story.

      Selling items on ebay is rather time intensive process. There are not too many sellers able to do the kind of volume Newegg would have to do to implement your suggestion. It would not be cost effective - and again, their margins are not large enough for that kind of stuff (both the returns, and the the selling on ebay).

  35. Re:At the risk of being modded offtopic... by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

    Hmm... seems you're right. Must have been a troll trying to see what kind of silliness they could get Slashdot to put on the front page.

  36. There's a reason for this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't like LCD TV's! They don't have anywhere near the response time of CRT's or plasma, you can't get near as much brightness or contrast, and the viewing angle is considerably less.

    For several months now, I have been reading (in articles on the major news outlets) that these factors weighed against LCD TV's but that LCD TV's were "good enough". I guess the market proved them wrong!

    1. Re:There's a reason for this... by badmammajamma · · Score: 1

      Response time has improved but is still slower for LCDs, however; brightness is now comparable to CRTs (with exception to t.v. models that overburn their tubes), and contrast is now as good or better than CRTs. Your viewing angle argument is also lacking. LCDs typically have a 170 degree viewing angle. This is more than sufficient for most people. It's also a much better viewing angle than you typically get with projection screen t.v. and some how those things sell like hotcakes.

      When it comes to television, CRTs still give the best picture over all other technologies. However, you would be hard pressed to argue that LCDs aren't competivive quality wise with the various projection screen sets. Apparently, people are willing to sacrifice quality for size. Since they don't make giant size LCD sets, LCD takes it on the chin from the CRTs.

      Personally, I'm quite happy with my 250 lb. tube t.v. :)

      --
      Any man who afflicts the human race with ideas must be prepared to see them misunderstood. -- H. L. Mencken
    2. Re:There's a reason for this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Response time has improved but is still slower for LCDs
      yeah

      however; brightness is now comparable to CRTs
      no!

      Your viewing angle argument is also lacking. LCDs typically have a 170 degree viewing angle
      no!

      Look, all you gotta do is go to any appliance store and compare the suckers right on the floor; you lie!

      LCDs aren't competitive quality wise with the various projection screen sets.
      Read my orginal post: ...of CRT's or plasma
      Moron!

      Personally, I'm quite happy with my 250 lb. tube t.v. :)
      So, after all that bullshit, you still have a CRT, not an LCD? Guess we know where the argument with you ends, don't we?

      Look, you said NOTHING! You expressed NOTHING! and gave yourself +1. What? Are you seeking mod-points for the next big Windows vs. Linux debate to mod down them hippies? Spare me!

  37. Why would you want one? by GreatDrok · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm a bit of a videophile (audiophile too but lets not get into that).

    Currently, the best available picture quality for direct view is still the venerable CRT. LCD and Plasma screens need video scalers to map the input signal to the display and these are rarely any good, certainly not in the consumer level equipment. Also, LCDs have very poor black level so the picture often looks rather grey. Plasma screens often have poor colour characteristics and also suffer from short lifespans. If you are considering one though, make sure you buy the Video Essentials DVD and learn how to use it so you can test any prospective purchase.

    For projection systems the situation is somewhat different, a CRT projector while often capable of staggering picture quality is much harder to set up than an LCD or DLP projector and vastly more expensive. LCDs are generally less good than a DLP projector. DLP has better contrast ratio but may suffer from rainbow fringing if you get a single chip example. Correct calibration will fix this. LCDs have been much harder to calibrate well compared with a DLP in my experience and often suffer from uneven colour: several examples I tested looked slightly green on one side of the screen and blue on the other. Yuck.

    There are other technologies coming along (OLED for instance) that look likely to change the landscape dramatically. I certainly wouldn't plunk down any money on an LCD TV. A plasma screen would also not be on my list as the picture just isn't big enough for movies IMHO. A good DLP based front projector supplemented by a standard CRT for normal TV will be far cheaper, and likely better quality than a plasma screen of half the size. The video scaler (Faroudja DDI) in my little DLP projector is much better quality than any of those I have seen in LCD or plasma screens and the projector cost a fraction of the price of the 40" examples.

    I would certainly recommend buying a 16:9 set though (I got my first one back in '92 and people thought I was mad) but look at direct view CRT or rear/front projection DLP for the best bang for the buck I think.

    --
    "I have the attention span of a strobe lit goldfish, please get to the point quickly!"
    1. Re:Why would you want one? by GuyinVA · · Score: 1

      Agreed
      When i went to buy a new TV for my bachler pad, it look me about 10 seconds to change my mind about LCD when I saw the DLP next to it. The picture is better, it costs less, and in 5000 hours of viewing, will only cost a couple hundred dollars to replace the bulb, as oposed to having to replace the whole LCD. It's a Samsung 43" DLP/HDTV ready unit.

      The only advantage about LCD is the thickness, or lack of. but the bigger units are still heavy

    2. Re:Why would you want one? by Alioth · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I certainly agree with you on CRTs. I won't be giving up my 21in. Sun (Trinitron tube) monitor any time soon - there's nothing even vaguely good-value-for-money which will do 1600x1200 and look good at all other resolutions as well. The only problem with the monitor is it's getting a little bit older and it's not quite as pin-sharp as it used to be (although once fully warmed up it's not bad, and DVDs look superb).

      Quick question though: when I walk down the street, I see people with widescreen TVs in their front rooms. However, no one ever seems to ever be watching anything widescreen - instead they are usually watching 4x3 formatted TV in 'Fatvision' (i.e. stretched to fill the width, instead of 'vertical letterbox'). I suppose it brings new meaning to "TV makes people look fat". Do you watch 4x3 TV in Stretchvision or vertical letterbox? If you watch it in Stretchvision, WHY!?

    3. Re:Why would you want one? by rjstanford · · Score: 1

      Quick question though: when I walk down the street, I see people with widescreen TVs in their front rooms. However, no one ever seems to ever be watching anything widescreen - instead they are usually watching 4x3 formatted TV in 'Fatvision' (i.e. stretched to fill the width, instead of 'vertical letterbox'). I suppose it brings new meaning to "TV makes people look fat". Do you watch 4x3 TV in Stretchvision or vertical letterbox? If you watch it in Stretchvision, WHY!?

      I don't watch much TV, but I enjoy movies (65" Widescreen). I only buy Anamorphic discs (hard to find non- these days), so no issues there. When I watch SDTV, I view it in standard mode, with the vertical letterboxing on the sides. Most of the TV that I watch these days is HD though, which fills the screen just fine since it uses the 16x9 format as well. I don't play many videogames, but I got an XBOX instead of a PS2 simply because outputs widescreen 480p - again, the full view area is used with no distortion.

      --
      You're special forces then? That's great! I just love your olympics!
    4. Re:Why would you want one? by realmolo · · Score: 2, Informative

      Regarding the "Fatvision"-

      People watch it that way because they're idiots, basically. I actually had this discussion with a guy I know who bought a Gateway LCD TV (which is truly a piece of shit, by the way).

      Me: "You know, you can set it so that the picture isn't stretched out like that."

      Him: "Yeah, but then I get those black bars, and I didn't pay all that money to not use all the screen."

      Me: "But it looks pretty awful"

      Him: "Oh, I've gotten used to it."

      So this guy spent a couple thousand bucks to have a TV with a picture that looks worse than my $200 Philips (and much worse than his former TV, a nice 32" Toshiba). And he was apparently happy with it.

      You know what they say about a fool and his money...

    5. Re:Why would you want one? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a bit of a videophile (audiophile too but lets not get into that).

      I've never met a self-proclaimed audiophile that wasn't full-O-shit. And, if you didn't want to get into it, then you wouldn't have mentioned it, but hey, you couldn't help but boast, right? Audiophile?...Videophile?...more like Gomer Pile!

    6. Re:Why would you want one? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you can get native 1:1 resolution where each pixel on the display is exactly equal to one pixel of the video, then LCD has the potential to look more brilliant and sharp than CRT.

      But good luck doing this, since half the people working in the industry do not understand the fact that overscan is necessary.

    7. Re:Why would you want one? by AGTiny · · Score: 1

      LOL yeah, there is only one way to watch 4x3 content: in pillarbox format. Any kind of stretch is a silly thing to do. We watch a lot of 4x3 on our HDTV with gray bars and it doesn't even bother the wife or kids anymore.

    8. Re:Why would you want one? by GreatDrok · · Score: 1
      Do you watch 4x3 TV in Stretchvision or vertical letterbox? If you watch it in Stretchvision, WHY!?

      No, I watch in whatever shape is appropriate. This comes from years of letterboxed LDs. I also get annoyed when all these people who buy widescreen TVs insist on 'filling the screen' even when watching 4:3 material. I have noticed many sets in pubs showing football (soccer) matches in the wrong shape and it really bugs me.

      I think a lot of the problem is that people feel that the screen is wasted if they aren't using all of it. It is the same argument as was used against letterboxed LDs in the past. People just seem to have such a hard time understanding that films come in a variety of shapes.

      One thing that does bug me about DVDs is that they assume the screen is 1.85:1 for subtitles even if the film is 2.35:1 so the subtitles hang off the picture. With my projector I have variable mattes so I can make the screen exactly the right shape, but with subtitles they often hang off the screen. Yuck!

      --
      "I have the attention span of a strobe lit goldfish, please get to the point quickly!"
    9. Re:Why would you want one? by greed · · Score: 1
      So this guy spent a couple thousand bucks to have a TV with a picture that looks worse than my $200 Philips (and much worse than his former TV, a nice 32" Toshiba). And he was apparently happy with it.

      It took a while, but I finally convinced a friend to buy a decent 27" or 32" CRT set to replace his 20-year-old near-dead one.

      He wants a plasma, because it "will look so good", and "take up less space". (Not in a useful way--he won't be getting rid of the cabinet the TV currently sits on. You can't put anything in front of the screen, because you'd block the picture. You can't put anything behind, because you wouldn't see it.)

      All he watches is 4:3 broadcast programs. So my arguments basically revolve around buying a set for what you want to use it for. Movie buffs want 16:9, and will not care about pillarbox when watching 4:3.

      The other point was, get a nice but low-end set to replace the dead one now. When the plasma, LCD, DLP and soon OLED market settles down and the prices become something resembling reasonable, you've got a replacement for the newer-but-still-dying bedroom TV.

      That's all far too logical for the average consumer, it seems.

    10. Re:Why would you want one? by badmammajamma · · Score: 1

      If you really were a videophile, you would know that DLP sucks. Rainbows aside, they oversaturate the colors. I've never seen one that doesn't have major color saturation problems. I know there are some new designs coming out and hopefully they have fixed it, but for now there's no way I'd touch DLP. You need to research more LCD projection t.v's. LCD projection is the way to go for projection sets. You have to look around though because there's a big difference between the good ones and the mediocre ones. I'm guessing that you haven't actually viewed one that is made well.

      You also don't recommend plasma because it's not big enough for movies. They make 60" plasma screens, how fucking big does it need to be??

      --
      Any man who afflicts the human race with ideas must be prepared to see them misunderstood. -- H. L. Mencken
    11. Re:Why would you want one? by radish · · Score: 1

      Because if you use a TV technology which gets burn-in (like Plasma or most projection technologies) then having big black bars down the sides of the screen is a disaster.

      Anyway, I watch 4:3 on my plasma with the proportional stretch mode, which looks much better than a regular simple stretch and really, you do get used to it. I rarely notice it. 16:9 rules for movies, which I watch more of anyway.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    12. Re:Why would you want one? by G-funk · · Score: 1

      My housemate's got a nice widescreen, and we watch broadcast tv in "semi-zoom" where you lose maybe 20 lines off the top and bottom, but the bars on the sides are a lot less noticeable :)

      --
      Send lawyers, guns, and money!
    13. Re:Why would you want one? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great .. Just tell me why their is such a big price difference in TVs between the US & and the UK !

      I compared cheap TVs, and at Walmart and a few other US retailers, the TVs for the same size could be had for half the price ..

    14. Re:Why would you want one? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Videophile: Someone who watches the TV rather than the movie
      Audiophile: Someone who listens to the stereo rather than the music

    15. Re:Why would you want one? by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      Great .. Just tell me why their is such a big price difference in TVs between the US & and the UK !

      Could it be due to the different formats used? I know that PAL has more lines of resolution than NTSC , so you may be paying more for the circuitry. Also, I'm not sure about UK, but I know that in Germany the Bundespost taxed the TVs...maybe a difference in the level of taxation?

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
  38. The problem is... by NitroWolf · · Score: 5, Informative

    What the heck are they expecting when they sell LCD TV's for two to three times the cost of the SAME SIZE LCD monitor?

    I can walk into Best Buy, buy a cheap 17" monitor for $250 - $300 after rebate, and put a TV tuner box from Viewsonic on it for $150, that's $400 for a 17" TV. If I walk over to the TV sections, the CHEAPEST 15" TV is almost $500. The 17" LCD TV's are between $650 - $900... one is priced over $1000. So what's the deal? Why the hell would I EVER buy an LCD TV? There's absolutely no reason to pay as much as they want for an LCD TV. They are overcharging something fierce, when LCD monitors are cheaper, it's obviously not the LCD that's costing more for the TV... it's just plain corporate greed.

    So no... I sure as hell won't be buying an LCD TV anytime soon.

    1. Re:The problem is... by Lovedumplingx · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I hate to nitpick but your numbers are way off. I bought a 27" flat screen TV less than 2 months ago from Circuit City for $316 (No Rebates). I don't know what the LCD version would have been but I's not cheaper to buy a monitor and then a TV card.

    2. Re:The problem is... by l4m3z0r · · Score: 0

      If you consider a 17" monitor for $250 to be cheap then I suspect you are a sucker who would buy anything... You want a cheap Apple computer I have a G3-450 that would be a steal at $650?. I just checked pricewatch and I can get a 21" Sony Trinitron for $228 and that INCLUDES shipping. Heres link.

    3. Re:The problem is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You really need to lay off those cheap drugs mate. Note the topic of this article and all comments: LCD. Not CRT, not Trinitron, LCD.

    4. Re:The problem is... by mobby_6kl · · Score: 1

      Well of course, Do-It-Yourself is almost allways cheaper than a ready branded solution. I can build a Xeon server box for $2000 yet a similar performing Sun system costs >$10,000. One is over $1000...so what, some cars cost 10 times more than others, etc.

      What corporate greed? WTF are you talking about? Yeah they are trying to maximise their profits, but if the prices don't fall even when they see the stuff doesn't sell then probably they just can't go any lower.

      Just because you don't need something or can't afford it doesn't mean there's no use for it. WTF would somebody buy a Mac?? I'd never buy one, but I don't bitch about it. How abot the possibility that some people just don't have any space in their room for a big ass CRT TV? Or don't want to get bombarded by all the shit flying out of it?

    5. Re:The problem is... by Civil_Disobedient · · Score: 1

      I could never understand this, either. Take laptops. You can get a decent laptop for under $1,000, some with gi-normous LCD's on them. If you figure out the cost of the CPU/RAM/DVD drive/etc., you're left with maybe a hundred for the screen. That's what a 14-15" screen should cost -- max. Yet if I were to break said screen, I'd have to put down half a grand for a new one.

    6. Re:The problem is... by NitroWolf · · Score: 1

      You should me where you can buy a 27" LCD monitor OR TV for $316, and I will buy you a brand new computer of your choice.

      We're talking about LCD's here, not Flat screen TV's/CRTs. Re-read what this whole article is about. Then reread my reply to it. THEN come back and tell me I'm smoking weed for paying $250 - $300 for a 17" monitor.

    7. Re:The problem is... by NitroWolf · · Score: 1

      Yeah... too bad Sony doesn't make a 21" flat panel in the Trinitron line. Nice link to a CRT to fix up your numbers.

      Now, go back to the article and read where we are all talking about LCD's, not CRTs. Then re-read my reply where I'm talking about LCD's, not CRT's. THEN you show me a 21" LCD for $228 (with our without shipping), and I will buy your G3-450 for $1200 AND I will buy you brand new G5 to replace it.

      Looks like the only sucker here would be you, for buying a 21" Sony Trinitron for $228 thinking you're getting a good deal on a flat panel :(

    8. Re:The problem is... by NitroWolf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We're talking about a commodity item that is intended for every household in the US. Not a server that's intended for a niche market.

      I don't consider plugging 1 extra wire into an LCD monitor a "Do-it-yourself" project. Regardless, ALL of the parts in an LCD TV are in the monitor + viewsonic box combo... and it's almost HALF as cheap as an equivilent TV. Not $100 cheaper, not even $200 cheaper, but $450 cheaper.

      THAT is corporate greed, my friend. They are marking up the TV by ridiculous numbers, and then wondering why no one is buying them. It's kind of like "Duh." You're selling a product for 2x what it's worth and you wonder why no one buys it?

    9. Re:The problem is... by karnal · · Score: 1

      Well of course, Do-It-Yourself is almost allways cheaper than a ready branded solution. I can build a Xeon server box for $2000 yet a similar performing Sun system costs >$10,000. One is over $1000...so what, some cars cost 10 times more than others, etc.

      Wow, you're really comparing apples to oranges.. not even the same product family!

      What the parent was talking about was taking a monitor and a tv tuner (of which is what makes up a LCD tv) and it being at a significant price point lower than buying a similarly equipped LCD TV. You're talking about Sun hardware compared to Intel hardware????

      Weird.

      --
      Karnal
    10. Re:The problem is... by arudloff · · Score: 1

      Why the hell would I EVER buy an LCD TV? Uh... I just bought a 17" HDTV lcd TV with vga input for $500.. Soo... for 50 extra bucks, I have something of better quality.. I'm of the opposite opinion.. why the hell would anyone buy a lcd computer monitor instead of a lcd tv?

    11. Re:The problem is... by greed · · Score: 1
      Sun sells Intel Xeon-based servers.

      They aren't more than $10k, but you can pay about $25k for one of their AMD Opteron machines.

      The point is, usually there's a discount for buying all the components already put together. You're buying more than just the parts when you buy a Sun machine--there's the software licenses, the support for a year, and so on.

      But when you buy a TV, you just get a TV. It's a monitor and a tuner in one box. There's less cabling, only one power supply, and so on. Only one thing needs FCC and ULC approval. Only one manual needs to be printed, one shipping carton, and so on.

      So paying more to have the two devices integrated is truly ridiculous.

    12. Re:The problem is... by Lovedumplingx · · Score: 1

      I understand the article is relating to LCDs. But because in your post there wasn't a mention of LCDs (just because that was the topic doesn't mean you were referring to them) I thought you were trying to make a generalization of general prices of the TV market...in reference to how outrageous the LCD screens were. I was only pointing out (if my presumption of market reference was correct) that your numbers were a bit off.

    13. Re:The problem is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Idiot. He refers to LCD's eight times in his post.

    14. Re:The problem is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But because in your post there wasn't a mention of LCDs...

      For fuck's sake, the first line of the original comment says:

      What the heck are they expecting when they sell LCD TV's for two to three times the cost of the SAME SIZE LCD monitor ?

      You're being dense on purpose => you're a troll!

    15. Re:The problem is... by Lovedumplingx · · Score: 1

      From his post: "I can walk into Best Buy, buy a cheap 17" monitor for $250 - $300 after rebate, and put a TV tuner box from Viewsonic on it for $150, that's $400 for a 17" TV. If I walk over to the TV sections, the CHEAPEST 15" TV is almost $500. The 17" LCD TV's are between $650 - $900... one is priced over $1000."

      The one area referring to the price and he mentions LCDs once.

    16. Re:The problem is... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Define "better quality".

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    17. Re:The problem is... by imsabbel · · Score: 1

      Forget it. Even the best laptop screens ARE CRAP against a "stationary" tft, and a 1000$ notbook hasnt god a good laptop screen.
      Modern laptops have tfts compareable to those 3-4 years ago. Power requirements, thinnes and BUDGET (yeah, they have to cut corners to make them for cheap notebooks) really hurt quality.

      --
      HI O WISE PRINCE. WHT TOOK U SO DAM LONG?
    18. Re:The problem is... by NitroWolf · · Score: 1

      Why on earth would I say I could buy a 17" monitor for $250 - $300 if I was referring to a CRT? It's called context. Does it make ANY sense at all that I'd be talking about a CRT for that price? Any at all? No, it doesn't.

      The whole article is about LCD TV's, I'm clearly talking about LCD TV's, and you feel the need for me to put LCD in front of every reference to "monitor" or "TV" in my reply when I haven't mentioned CRT's even once. Why would I be referring to CRTS when I didn't mention them at all? That just doesn't make sense.

      It's like Chewbacca living on Endor... it just doesn't make sense.

    19. Re:The problem is... by karnal · · Score: 1

      Oops.

      Now my face is red. Where's that "Retract comment 'cause you're a dumbass" button?

      Manufacturers and stores looooove to make margins higher on convenience. For instance, I could have bought a lincoln town car, but didn't want to pay the extra 10k. So, I bought a Grand Marq instead. Same underpinnings, suspension and engine etc. The Lincoln had a slightly better dash (with analog clock smacked into the fake wood dash...) but other than that.......

      A fool and his money, though...

      --
      Karnal
  39. Re:gmail invites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Parent post is a offtopic troll.

  40. Re:Speaking of LCDs... -- 25% off? by scovetta · · Score: 1

    Ohhh, i see:
    DELL
    UltraSharp 2001FP 20.1-inch Flat Panel LCD Monitor with Height Adjustable Stand
    $899.00
    $719.20
    [You Save $179.80]

    --
    Wer mit Ungeheuern kämpft, mag zusehn, dass er nicht dabei zum Ungeheuer wird. --Nietzsche
  41. Plasma Rocks by Silver+Sloth · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I agree about LCD and Projection but I've just paid 1000 UKP for a 26" plasma and it's stunning. It reminds me of how I felt when I replaced my vinyl with CDs. The jump in clarity, specialy when watching DVDs, is exceptonal. The only problem, and I guess that I'm agreeing with your 'broadcast cable' comment, is that you become very aware of the broadcast quality.

    --
    init 11 - for when you need that edge.
    1. Re:Plasma Rocks by Dekks · · Score: 1

      Aye, I watch the occasional DVD and use component input, but at the end of the day I don't have the space or money for a kick ass surround sound system with pounding bass or a huge screen :( If I had the moolah though I'd totally do the same as you.

  42. The jury's in... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and you just won the award for worst hyperlink format ever

  43. Way expensive in Canada by Chirs · · Score: 1

    Dell Canada charges 1350 CAD for that thing. The US price, converted, works out to under 1000 CAD.

    I'm not impressed.

    1. Re:Way expensive in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, you're getting ripped off!

    2. Re:Way expensive in Canada by jargonCCNA · · Score: 1

      Plus shipping, plus customs, plus (probably) tariffs.. yeah, $350 can come up out of nowhere like that.

      --
      Matthew G P Coe
      http://mgpcoe.blogspot.com/
  44. Re:Speaking of LCDs... -- 25% off? by Eccles · · Score: 1

    Check techbargains.comperiodically, the 2001FP makes frequent appearances there for a little over $700.

    --
    Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
  45. how much cheaper? by xot · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Cheaper does not neccesarily mean affordable.For eg. If it falls from $500 to 400-450 , I still cannot afford it.
    Don't we all want lovely 21" LCD's to watch our collection of DivX movies?? or play doom3. :-P

    --
    Lord of the Binges.
  46. HOW much?? whither content.... by spoonyfork · · Score: 5, Interesting

    While a 42-inch Sony Wega LCD TV retails for $10,000, a 42-inch plasma set can be had for about $4,500. LCD TVs accounted for a measly 3 percent of all sets sold in the United States in 2003.

    I am a well-documented TV hater. One thing I could never understand were all the ads for TVs that cost $2k, $5k, and even $10k for the last couple of years. I thought that if they are advertising them people must be buying them. I'm interested to read that this isn't the case. But still, $4.5k for a TV? OMGWTFBBQ. Is Joey that much funnier on a $4.5k or even a $10k set?

    No? Now I get the real joke.

    --
    Speak truth to power.
    1. Re:HOW much?? whither content.... by GuyinVA · · Score: 1

      Go watch The matrix on your 30" 4:3 tube tv, then come over to my place and watch it on my 43" 16:9 DLP You'll see where the difference is. I got my big ass tv for my DVD's I'm a movie buff. I could care less about Joey or other brainless broadcasts, in fact i don't even have cable. just an antenna to watch the news on occasion.

    2. Re:HOW much?? whither content.... by kcornia · · Score: 1

      Not to mention all the HD content now being broadcast.

      Since I got my 50" LCD Projection TV, PBS HD has become my new favorite channel. All sorts of HD programming, and much of it travel and nature type stuff, which is awesome to watch in HD.

      Lastly, don't even get me started about how good the NFL looks in all its widescreen, HD glory..

      Add to that the DVR that came in the HD tuner I got from the cable company so I can record the Daily Show, and its all good in the hood sir!

    3. Re:HOW much?? whither content.... by spoonyfork · · Score: 1

      I appreciate that viewing a movie like The Matrix on a 30" 4:3 tube would be less desireable than viewing it on a 43" 16:9 DLP. The same argument stands that the 43" 16:9 DLP would be less than a high-end commerical movie theater which is where I saw The Matrix. I still don't see the value added. I can see these movies in the theater which is better than anything I can put in my home ... for a lot less money: $9 vs $10k or even $2k.

      --
      Speak truth to power.
    4. Re:HOW much?? whither content.... by sindarin2001 · · Score: 1

      I think it depends on how much time you spend watching movies. There's something nice about the cinema and seeing a good movie with the MASSIVE screen, but when you want to watch the whole Aliens quadrilogy you're going to have a problem when they don't have it in theaters. And theaters don't facilitate repeated viewings without a major price. Some people don't watch enough movies to warrent spending $2k on a screen, but for those who do, the price is worth it. Sadly I'd like to be a member of the latter, but am forced to the in the first group because of work :P

    5. Re:HOW much?? whither content.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Plus how many times can you watch the same movie? I don't care what the resolution is, dull is dull.

      When I was considering a fancy coffee maker I decided not to buy it when I calculated how many cups of coffee I'd have to buy to justify it's price. So a $2K screen (many are even higher) would require 222 $9 trips to the theater to justify it.

    6. Re:HOW much?? whither content.... by Glendale2x · · Score: 1

      I still don't see the value added. I can see these movies in the theater which is better than anything I can put in my home ... for a lot less money: $9 vs $10k or even $2k.

      The biggest value for me boils down to a lack of asshats with cell phones and parents with screaming babies who refuse to take the child out of the theater because "it's just a baby." I could also do without the losers who won't shut up, or the person who feels the need to explain every second of the movie to everyone around them. The big screen would be nice if everyone could behave.

      Some of the best theater experiences I've had were watching any of the LOTR movies at their first showing because 99% of the crowd were well behaved fans who wanted to stay up till 3am to watch the movie before everyone else. The worst ones were any other time.

      I'd rather have a big TV, nice sound system, my sofa, and a Netflix subscription. Aside from costing me less in the long run, if a movie really sucks, I don't lose $20. (Girlfriends are expensive. I never spent $35 at the theater before that, and as poor as I am, Netflix is a better deal.)

      At 35 bucks a shot for the theater, versus a $3000 widescreen TV, that'd give me about 85 theater movies. I've got almost triple that number in Netflix waiting, a lot of it stuff I've seen before and find worth my time to watch. Plus no idiots, a screen that's always in focus, a sound system that someone didn't mess with, and the food is cheaper. Plus it does HDTV, and some TV out there really is worth watching. (Not lame shit like Big Brother 5 or brain dead comedies.) That's the value to me, anyway.

      --
      this is my sig
    7. Re:HOW much?? whither content.... by radish · · Score: 1

      I hate movie theaters. Idiots with cellphones, popcorn crunching, sticky carpets, uncomfortable seats, etc etc. In my living room I can control who's there, I have a fridge full of beer a few steps away, I always get the best seat in the house and I don't have some tall guy's head blocking my view.

      Now I still go to the movies, if a big action type movie comes out that I want to see I'll go see it on the big screen. But I much prefer to watch at home.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    8. Re:HOW much?? whither content.... by spoonyfork · · Score: 1

      Plus how many times can you watch the same movie? I don't care what the resolution is, dull is dull.

      Bingo! Now if it is a movie I've never seen on a "big screen" then I could understand the desire but again, how many of those are there? Certainly not enough to justify the cost. Someone else in this thread mentioned sporting events which is a great point but at the $2k mark I could buy season tickets to a couple venues... or just go to a bar and watch in on their big ass TVs with my friends at much less the cost.

      --
      Speak truth to power.
    9. Re:HOW much?? whither content.... by spoonyfork · · Score: 1

      Plus no idiots

      Heh.

      --
      Speak truth to power.
    10. Re:HOW much?? whither content.... by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      Your point is well taken. It does take a real stretch to drop $4k-5k on an LCD wall mount when a 720p front projector set-up with a 10' (yes, 10 foot) screen can be had for under 3k and a day of tinkering (you're going to spend a couple hours with your new LCD flat panel as well).

      Now, throw the matrix up on a 119" screen and you'll be blown away. Of course, now you can use the $1500 you saved to upgrade your audio system. ;-)

      Light control? Get some blinds. Don't like that sdea? sit on your hands 'til next summer and spring for a Sony black screen. Oh, but get in line...it's already on my summer wish list.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    11. Re:HOW much?? whither content.... by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      That's 111 trips for a couple, and closer to 75 if you get popcorn and a drink. Have 2 kids? You're down to about 40 trips (kids cost less, but they each have to have thir own drink). What, you leave the kids at home? Pony up $30 for the sitter then (you can't win, I tell you).

      Even with that, it's not about the absolute cost. If you've got a comfortable place to watch and a decent stereo (would a 5.1 be a quinto?), you can get most of the advantages (immersive experience) without the distracting disadvantages (cell phones, people talking, popcorn scalpers, no bathroom breaks).

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    12. Re:HOW much?? whither content.... by Eccles · · Score: 1

      Plus how many times can you watch the same movie?

      Ask a kid. But there's Blockbuster, Netflix, the library, and friends as sources of movies, not to mention cable/sat/broadcast. The theater takes time, transportation costs, and hassle, limits my food choices, and has a far more limited selection. I can also invite friends over for a movie, and make it a much more social event than a theater. Compared to sailing, performance cars (or simply a new car rather than a used one), golf, or many other hobbies, a few thou on a big screen isn't that much.

      That being said, I have a 27" TV.

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
  47. What it RETAILS for... by apoplectic · · Score: 1, Informative

    While a 42-inch Sony (SNE) Wega LCD TV retails for $10,000...

    Uh, sure. But in practicality, I purchased a 60 inch Sony Wega LCD 2 weeks ago for $4500.

    1. Re:What it RETAILS for... by JawzX · · Score: 2, Informative

      that 60" sony WEGA was rear projection LCD... they don't even MAKE a 60" LCD PANEL

    2. Re:What it RETAILS for... by apoplectic · · Score: 1

      True enough, the system in question is LCD projection. However, the article nowhere explicitly mentions the word "panel" despite its implication.

    3. Re:What it RETAILS for... by MustardMan · · Score: 1

      I tried to moderate Jawz's comment as informative, but brain farted and somehow did troll, so I'm posting to reverse my moderation.

      I am kinda bummed that the parent is loing my original Troll moderation, as he's using a play on the meaning and clearly understood implication of the term LCD to mislead people.

    4. Re:What it RETAILS for... by Canuck_TV · · Score: 1

      The previous poster was referring to a flat-panel LCD TV. You're talking rear-projection LCD - An entirely different beast. His panel is 42". Yours is less than an inch...

    5. Re:What it RETAILS for... by apoplectic · · Score: 1

      Without sounding flamey or troll-like, would you care to elaborate as to what I'm "playing on the meaning" of? I only clearly understood the implication after reading the follow-up to my original post. If you feel the need to mod my post to neg-5, be my guest...but your intentions appear nothing short of retributive.

    6. Re:What it RETAILS for... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "His panel is 42". Yours is less than an inch..."

      I hope you are still talking about screen sizes here.

  48. LCD doesn't offer CRT quality! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Come on! LCD's are thin. That is cool, but big whoop!

    I can get a 19" CRT monitor that does 1600x1200 for $99. The refresh rate is 75Hz or more.

    These LCD screens have slow response rate and don't offer near the resolution. If you expect me to trade in my CRT for a much more expensive monitor, then I better be upgrading. But, "thin" just isn't going to cut it for me to shell out that kind of money.

    When the OLEDs come out, we'll talk.

  49. Re:gmail invites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since I'm at work, would someone mind telling me what's so terrible about clicking on one of these gmail invites?

  50. Plasma cheaper than LCD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a minute....
    From the article:

    Plasma screens and digital light-processing rear-projection screens give consumers more for less: While a 42-inch Sony (SNE) Wega LCD TV retails for $10,000, a 42-inch plasma set can be had for about $4,500. LCD TVs accounted for a measly 3 percent of all sets sold in the United States in 2003.

    It's almost as if they switch Plasma with LCD in the above paragraph from the article. I have not found a comparable Plasma for the price of a LCD. Sony 42" go for mid $3000's. Where on earth do they get that consumers are buying up plasma's over LCD's for cheaper prices???

  51. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Twice? Why did you get married a second time?

    Once is more than enough for me.

  52. price difference by cybpunks3 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The problem is that there is a 200+ dollar price difference between an LCD computer monitor and an LCD TV at the same size. This is ridiculous since the only real difference may be the addition of cheap speakers and a TV tuner.

    You can get a 14" LCD monitor for less than $300 but the TV version is over $500. It's just not worth it. And of course price increases geometrically with size.

    Economy of scale has not worked its magic the way it has with tube TVs (tube TVs are dirt-cheap these days).

    1. Re:price difference by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      Part of the high price comes from the inherent difficulties in manufacturing large LCD panels as well. The price differential though is just silly.

      Sharp makes several nice VGA/Composite screens that can be used as TVs or monitors.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    2. Re:price difference by psychopracter · · Score: 2, Informative

      The problem is that there is a 200+ dollar price difference between an LCD computer monitor and an LCD TV at the same size. This is ridiculous since the only real difference may be the addition of cheap speakers and a TV tuner.

      Bingo!

      I have a lovely Formac 17" LCD for my PowerMac tower (bought back when it was in the $900 range.) I can get a 20" LCD from them for $1200, and a 17" is about $650.

      I have a small TV in my office room and was thinking about replacing it with a 17 or 20 inch LCD TV. I strolled into the local Frys expecting to see the 20" LCDs costing within $50 of a LDC monitor of the same size. Well, imagine my state of flabbergasted shock when I saw that they were at least $800more than a monitor.

      I said screw you Sony, Zenith, Panasonic, etc and shelled out another $300 to buy a tv tuner/video capture widget.

      Actually, I ought to thank those greedy price gouging bastards. I had $1300 budgeted to buy a an LCD TV. I've thrown the remaining $1000 into savings, and buy the time that Tiger comes out I'll have the CASH to buy a top end dual G5. I couldn't have done it without them.

      --
      OS X:*nix for the real world.
  53. The Next Wave: Optical Interference Displays by reporter · · Score: 5, Informative
    $389 for a 15" LCD screen can hardly be justified when 19" CRT's are half that price.

    You have captured the essence of the problem.

    Further, when you look closely at an LCD television, you notice that the image quality is no better than the image produced by a CRT television. So, why would anyone the premium price for the LCD television?

    People do want the convenience of an LCD, which uses much less space than a CRT. Yet, they also want improved picture quality in order to justify the price.

    The answer is just around the corner: optical interference displays (OIDs). They produce far sharper and brighter images than an LCD. The OID also consumes less power than an LCD.

  54. Re:gmail invites by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nothing. A bunch of trolls are going around trying to keep people from clicking them so that they can horde a bunch of invites to sell on eBay. I just used one myself.

  55. LCD TV technology is not up to par yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For decent LCD TV .. you need to have at least 1000:1 contrast ratio (look at current LCD monitor contrast ratios of 400:1 and 500:1). Notice that many HDTV's are way higher. AND you also need under 16 ms response time (Preferably 10 ms). Otherwise movement will suck. Some may do math and say NTSC refreshes every 60 Hz (16ms). But when you are talking LCD the refresh has to actually be lower because of the corporate definition of when a pixel is off (it doesn't have to be black and can be grey).

    There you have it. Note to LCD manufacturers overcome those problems and people will buy 'em.

  56. Inflation! BAH! by JawzX · · Score: 1

    If we applied that formula to my paycheck I should be making over $12 an hour washing dishes... Seems dish washers still make less than $7.50 an hour and although my current job pays more, I have significntly more responsibility and education than I did when I washed dishes after school.

    1. Re:Inflation! BAH! by leerpm · · Score: 0

      And you've just stumbled across one of the best kept secrets about the state of our economy. While real inflation has remained relatively low since the 80's, it is still there, gradually increasing the cost of living bit-by-bit year after year. Unfortunately wages have essentially remained flat for the past 2 decades. Even though people are still making the same amount of money dollar-wise, its worth a lot less now than it was years ago.

      What is the end result? Consumer debt. People start borrowing more and more to finance their lifestyles. Sooner or later though, this will come to and end, and there will be a 'market adjustion' as government and businesses wake up and realize no one can afford to even live on minimum wage. At that point the economy is not going to continue to function unless some major steps are taken to realign the imbalance in power that exists between corporations and the middle-class.

    2. Re:Inflation! BAH! by JawzX · · Score: 1

      Amen. For quite some time now I've thought of livingin a shack in the woods and "homesteading it" but with property taxes in my state what they are, I'm not sure I can afford it... I both dread and long for the "shake up".

  57. Fat chance by Rich+Klein · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Are these the same people who told us in the 80s that CD prices would come down as production ramped up?

    --
    -Rich
    1. Re:Fat chance by CrankyFool · · Score: 1

      Oh, that would never happen. It's not like I was buying 10-pack of CDs for about $20 (but there's a $10 rebate! So I'm actually getting them for $1/each!) about 12 years ago, but recently bought a 200-pack for $3 ($43 - $40 rebate; Don't want a rebate? Fry's sells 50-pack for $4.50 pretty often).

      There's a difference between blank CDs -- where it's purely a manufacturing issue, and production has ramped up enormously, and prices have just dived through the floor (hell, look at DVD media costs) -- and CDs with "stuff" on them. You really think you _ever_ paid all that much for the media? It's the stuff that's expensive.

    2. Re:Fat chance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The media prices did drop through the floor. I just bought a spindle of 100 blanks for $8, I probably could have gotten them cheaper if I wanted to look for a sale.

      What hasn't decreased is corporate greed. The high media prices and the novelty premium initially set the high price of a music CD, but as the novelty wore off and the media prices dropped, the corporations simply fattened their profit margin.

    3. Re:Fat chance by aonaran · · Score: 1

      They have come down.
      The average price for a typical new release Pop CD was $25 now it's $15 ... not as much as it SHOULD have come down (see the DVD example, in only a few years the minimum price for a hollywood DVD went from $29 to $8... sure the average is still $25, but there are a lot of good flicks in the $12-$19 range) ...but the prices have come down.

    4. Re:Fat chance by badmammajamma · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I remember this distinctly. CDs STARTED at $15 - 16. This was twice the price of what I paid for records and tapes. I have no idea where you were getting ripped off so badly and paying $25 for CDs. Anyway, the music industry insisted that the prices would drop down to around $8 after volume increased. This drop never happened. This is why I don't feel sorry for the record companies that whine on and on about p2p file sharing. Fuck 'em.

      --
      Any man who afflicts the human race with ideas must be prepared to see them misunderstood. -- H. L. Mencken
    5. Re:Fat chance by aonaran · · Score: 1

      Sorry I should have specified, that was all in $ Canadian.

    6. Re:Fat chance by Rich+Klein · · Score: 1

      Sorry folks, I wasn't even thinking about blank media prices, just pre-recorded CDs. ISTR that when I started buying CDs in the late 80s they went for $12-$15, and last time I looked they were still going for roughly that much, with the exception of some bargain bin stuff on clearance. I stopped buying CDs after the RIAA started suing their customers, so I haven't looked at CD prices in the last year or so.

      Anyway, I can see LCD display prices coming down gradually, but nothing as drastic as this article implies.

      --
      -Rich
  58. Re:Does the LCD account for a big chunk of the pri by Lehk228 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'd like to add that when a small LCD is ruined by a group of bad pixels you have (assuming its a moderately large display, 128*64) just over 8000 good pixels wasted, not really all that many, but a 1280*1024 display, while still considered "damaged" with a few dead pixels you end up with over 1.3 million good pixels being "wasted"

    --
    Snowden and Manning are heroes.
  59. Re:Does the LCD account for a big chunk of the pri by Mateito · · Score: 1
    There are only so many that can be tolerated before the panel is useless

    And in my book, than number is 1.

    A hate working on a monitor that has a little black dot in the middle of the screen. This is one advantage that CRTs still have over LCD. Maybe when resolutions get so his that a single missing pixel is effectively unnoticable, it won't bug me so much.

    There was a survey a year or so ago (I don't know by whom and I don't feel like googling.. was up all night watching the 70s cop movies I picked up for $5 each on DVD [You the man, Shaft] and I'm cranky as a cat full of cut snakes), but most companies wouldn't replace and LCD until there were anywhere from 6 to 20 dead pixels.

    Given how annoying one is, something with half a dozen or more would drive me nuts.

  60. over manufacturing by digitalgimpus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    IMHO It's just more lax production quality standards.

    I *think* there are more dead pixels per 1000 units now than there were just a few years ago. I don't know many with an LCD that didn't ship with one. All brands. I don't remember that just a short while ago.

    I personally would perfer some better quality. Ideally give me a choice: 0 dead pixel guarantee and I'll pay extra. If I don't care, I'll take the damaged goods and pay less.

    I just don't think it's fair to be paying so much for damaged goods. These dead pixels are annoying. And you often need several to qualify for a replacement, regardless of position on the screen.

    Was my post informative? Help me get a free flat screen by completing 1 silly little offer. I need one to go with my free iPod.

  61. MOD PARENT DOWN! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's the same lameass no-lifer troll that wrote the fake gmail invite post in the first place. Don't believe me? Klick on one of the "gmail invite" links in the grandparent post and you'll be wiser...

  62. why? by Q-Branch · · Score: 1

    it means cheaper cellular phones and laptops

    Why wouldn't it mean cheaper lcd tvs?
    seems more logical to me.

    1. Re:why? by Hodgedog · · Score: 1

      Because TV's are larger panels in comparison. Chances are greater you'll have a dead pixel in a 42" TV vs. a small 2 in. by 2 in. cellphone panel, thus they are scrapping more TV's which raises the price per unit.

  63. Why TVs? by sleighb0y · · Score: 1

    I don't quite understand buying a big bulky TV for television/movie viewing.

    Why not just buy a projector for about the cost and you can get a screen size that makes your 60" TV look pathetic! Situate the projector even just 10 feet back from the wall and you can produce a large (6 foot+) "screen".

    Projectors...

    *Are small, and light
    *Project a massive screen size
    *Cost as much as a nice TV
    *Take just about any input Composite/*GA/S-Video/DVI

    So what you have to replace the lamp after many thousands of hours of use. The cost-to-screensize make it worth it, to me.

    It will take up very little space in your entertaining area, compared to a mammoth TV.

    Plus, if your setup allows, it can double as your primary computer display. I've not written code on a screen that size, and I probavbly would not want to..but for games or movie viewing it is nice.

    1. Re:Why TVs? by Hassman · · Score: 1

      If you are too close they look grainy. My friend had one. It is really cool, but you have to sit so far away for it not to look pixelated.

      Plus can you get an HDTV projector?

      Also, then you have to deal with hanging it or mounting it soemwhere. It looks tacky. People movign around in front of it block the image for everyone.

      Just some thoughts.

      --
      -Mark
      Dovie'andi se tovya sagain.
    2. Re:Why TVs? by sleighb0y · · Score: 1

      Typically you would mount the projector above and behind where you sat. And if you have a small living room and have to sit so close that it looks grainy then that is sure not the best option for you.

      For optimal image quality you are supposed to use some sort fo screen. I've projected onto white walls and didn't think it was bad at all.

      For fun: Project onto white plastic horizontal blinds, mirror the image, go out and sit in the yard and watch TV on your blinds!

      I think you can get HDTV, but it'll costs ya :)

      I guess I just see it differently, becuase a big TV that take up 15+ cubic feet of space is the waste of space and ugly in my eyes.

    3. Re:Why TVs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Plenty of reasons. What if the viewing area is brightly lit? In that situation projectors suck. What if you can't mount the projector in the ceiling, for whatever reason? What if you don't have a nice large, flat, proper-tone surface to project against?

      Projectors are great, but they don't work well in all situations. And if you want a projector that does true HD resolutions (not ED), you're talking about $2k and up, at least for now.

    4. Re:Why TVs? by Zed2K · · Score: 1

      Cons:

      Need a relatively dark room.
      Need a place to mount the projector on the ceiling or the floor.
      Configuration to get the picture right takes more work.
      Won't work well for oddly shaped rooms.

    5. Re:Why TVs? by Hassman · · Score: 1

      Fair enough. Definitely something to consider. I'll be in the market for a TV shortly, and i want to do it right.

      --
      -Mark
      Dovie'andi se tovya sagain.
    6. Re:Why TVs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      heh, exactly my setup - 14 foot screen from a 3.5k projector; dual headed 17" LCDs in the office. I find dual 17s give me adequate real estate, plus I have them attached to the peg board at the back of the desk so there's no stands to worry about. I'm thinking about adding a third 17" (average about $300 for the model I have).

  64. Slack or Suck! by webzombie · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Lets see

    19" LCD monitor $1000
    20" LCD TV $1600
    The look of the faces of the tards that don't know there is NO difference...PRICELESS!

    Hey, maybe we need a colour coded scale which consumers can use as a quick reference guide to commercial terrorism.... ah forget it just invade!

    1. Re:Slack or Suck! by AGTiny · · Score: 1

      Um, the TV has a TV tuner, maybe an HDTV ATSC tuner (although probably not on a 20" model), a remote, etc. You can't really just buy a 19" computer monitor and watch TV on it. Some have S-Video jacks, but you still need additional hardware to watch TV on it.

    2. Re:Slack or Suck! by CoughDropAddict · · Score: 1
      19" LCD monitor $1000
      20" LCD TV $1600
      The look of the faces of the tards that don't know there is NO difference...PRICELESS!


      No difference except
      1. Speakers
      2. A Remote
      3. A Tuner
      4. More inputs (component, s-video, coax)
    3. Re:Slack or Suck! by hughk · · Score: 1

      There is a difference, the monitor would give you 1600x1200 but the TV will be much less, prob around 1024x768 native resolution (but at a multiple of the price).

      --
      See my journal, I write things there
  65. Re:The Next Wave: Optical Interference Displays by AaronGTurner · · Score: 4, Informative
    The only real advantages of LCD TVs currently are:
    • Being able to mount one on a wall (e.g. a bedroom) where you want to use a minimum of space.
    • Reduced power consumption.

    Negative points are:

    • Viewing angles still limited
    • Not necessarily as bright.

    There are other thin TV techologies coming along, though, which may be better for TVs than LCD (but perhaps a bit too heavy for a monitor, compared to how useful LCDs are for monitors).

  66. Re:Does the LCD account for a big chunk of the pri by b0bby · · Score: 1

    From the article is appears that they've gone from $26 to $18...

  67. MOD PARENT DOWN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Advocates illegal activities (slander) and makes broad false accusations. Also, his post is offtopic flamebait that deserves to be shredded.

  68. High Price, Mediocre Performance by stratjakt · · Score: 1

    It's no wonder LCD TV and Monitor sales havent taken off.

    About the only thing LCD monitors or TVs have going for them is the footprint on your desk.

    I hate the viewing angle problems, motion blur problems, the way "lower resolutions" look once they've been stretched.

    I hate the way something really dark looks, like Doom 3 or watch Aliens or another dark movie. See all the bands of dark grey. Ick.

    They still have all these problems, things have been improving, but still the picture on a quality CRT blows away any LCD I've ever seen.

    They aren't even that much more energy efficient. The standalone TVs and monitors have backlights that are bright as hell to try and compensate for the viewing angle thing.

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    1. Re:High Price, Mediocre Performance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Native-resolution LCD blows your silly little CRT out of the water.

      Scaled resolutions do tend to suck ass, though.

    2. Re:High Price, Mediocre Performance by Buran · · Score: 1

      Um, Doom 3 on my new 19" LCD blows away my old 17" CRT monitor, and that monitor was a pretty good monitor. The black restore function is also tons better. The monitor is also a hell of a lot crisper, and the viewing angle's pretty decent. You must be looking at crappy monitors.

  69. Physical volume... by genixia · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's just not worth spending the extra money on a 15" LCD television. Consider the market - most small televisions are put in the kitchen, a bedroom, or a utility/exercise type room. People don't really want to spend much money on such televisions. Furthermore, the space savings of a 15" LCD over a 15" CRT television isn't that huge. A 15" CRT will happily sit on a dresser or a shelf.

    The real market for LCD televisions is for the large televisions. The difference in physical volume between a 34+" LCD and a 34+" CRT television is significant. And you can wall mount an LCD - the CRT will need some form of stand.

  70. As opposed to individual people... by raehl · · Score: 4, Funny

    Corps HATE losing money.

    Right, because individuals just LOVE to lose it.

  71. The big con with LCD & TV technology by shic · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I suspect that these lack-lustre sales are made worse by recent laptop trends. I've an 18 month old laptop I intended to replace after 2 years. The old laptop has a great 1600x1200 UXGA LCD screen. While I could make use of the higher performance processors found in more recent notebooks and would welcome a DVD writer and larger hard disk - these concerns are secondary to my ability to display my work on-screen. Almost every high spec laptop today comes with a "Wide" screen - WUXGA or similar - these wide-formats just don't suit my needs. I use small fonts which become unreadable on WUXGA as the aspect ratio changes sufficiently to cause eyestrain - when I increase my font size sufficiently to read my data on WUXGA I've lost any horizontal resolution advantage I may have gained.

    The reason for this move to wide format screens is (sadly) obvious (once you break out a calculator). Screens are marketed upon diagonal size - but manufacturing cost is more closely related to screen area. It is interesting to note that 15.4" wide LCD has almost exactly the same screen area as a 15" LCD of traditional ratios - yet even apparently savvy buyers are mislead to believe they are getting a larger screen.

    1. Re:The big con with LCD & TV technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The aspect ratio of the 15.4" WUXGA is the same as your UXGA 15" screen for text, there are just extra pixels on the sides. Your text looks exactly the same.

      I have one. I know. If I put it into UXGA mode, there are just black bars on the sides, now it is just like yours. When i put it into WUXGA mode, there are just more active pixels, but the format of the text does not change at all. I have no idea what you are talking about, but there is no truth whatsoever behind it.

      Get a WUXGA screen, get a little more screen real estate, put an apple dock on the right side and your menu bar on the left, now you work in a UXGA environment with all of the space usable...

    2. Re:The big con with LCD & TV technology by NerveGas · · Score: 1


      Your fonts won't look any different (except maybe slightly smaller) if you're choosing the right resolution. Uing a resolution with a 4:3 aspect ratio (like 640*480, 1024*768, 1600*1200) on a screen with an aspect ratio of 16:9 will make things look funny, but that's why you get resolution choices with a 16:9 aspect ratio: So that everything comes out right.

      steve

      --
      Oh, you're not stuck, you're just unable to let go of the onion rings.
    3. Re:The big con with LCD & TV technology by shic · · Score: 1

      Hmm - I guess it might be important to know if you've a 16:9 or a 16:10 ratio WUXGA...

      UXGA (4:3)
      Pixels :1600x1200
      Diagonal size :15"
      Ratio (H:V) :4:3
      Horizontal size :12"
      Vertical size :9"
      Screen Area :108"^2
      Horizontal ppi :133.3...
      Vertical ppi :133.3...
      H-V ratio : 1:1 [i.e. square pixels.]

      WUXGA (16:9)
      Pixels :1920x1200
      Diagonal size :15.4"
      Ratio (H:V) :16:9
      Horizontal size :~13.42"
      Vertical size :~7.55"
      Screen area :101.32"^2
      Horizontal ppi :~143.1
      Vertical ppi :~158.9
      H-V ratio : 9:10 [i.e rectangular pixels]

      While I accept that the 16:10 ratio WUXGA would have square pixels at ~147 ppi, this certainly isn't how the ratio appeared when I last used a WUXGA TFT. I wonder if my perception was skewed by the fact that I find single pixels at resolutions above ~133 ppi very difficult to distinguish? In my opinion wide screen aspect ratios and higher resolutions have a far greater interdependency with fonts and user interfaces than it appears most have assumed.

      My argument about widescreen formats suiting marketing (and definitely not all users) stands. I still believe that most consumers would assume a 15.4" display has noticeably greater screen area than a 15" - while this is absolutely not the case. Even with a 16:10 ratio the screen has ~2 square inches less physical screen area.

      I wonder - am I the only one who wants a tall screen more than a wide one anyway? I vaguely recall Apple(?) launching a portrait A4 screen back in the 80s - that physical shape would suit me better than even a traditional 4:3. I'm mainly miffed that so many manufacturers have opted only to supply high end notebooks with widescreen - in spite of the fact that widescreen isn't necessarily better for every application.

    4. Re:The big con with LCD & TV technology by shic · · Score: 1

      I assume now (having done some research) that _your_ WUXGA is 16:10 and not 16:9 then?

      The argument about screen area stands... I would still prefer to use a 15" UXGA in 4:3 than a 15.4" in 16:10 as both have the same vertical resolution (which matters most to me) yet the WXGA is significantly physically smaller in the vertical dimension and smaller overall.

    5. Re:The big con with LCD & TV technology by NerveGas · · Score: 1

      I wonder - am I the only one who wants a tall screen more than a wide one anyway? I vaguely recall Apple(?) launching a portrait A4 screen back in the 80s

      You're certainly not the only person. There are occasions when it would be nifty for me, too - just not very often. And people's natural tendency is to scan left and right, not up and down.

      There was even a monitor marketted where you could simply reach up and rotate the monitor, and supposedly the video drivers would automatically switch the aspect ratio. Really nifty, but it was absurdly expensive.

      steve

      --
      Oh, you're not stuck, you're just unable to let go of the onion rings.
    6. Re:The big con with LCD & TV technology by shic · · Score: 1

      Yes - I vaguely recall that disaster product... It failed for the same reason Apple did - IHMO - while I suspect many users would prefer a tall screen over a wide one value-for-money over-rules this concern.

      It makes a lot of intuitive sense to me to prefer tall screens over wide ones. When working on complex documents it is usually a big advantage to get as much on-screen as possible to avoid tedious un-necessary scrolling... but I (and maybe everyone) finds it difficult to follow very long lines of text or figures without loosing my place... [I suppose that is why newspapers usually use a columnar format.] There is no such problem when a large number of lines are displayed - which I would have imagined would make taller displays an obvious choice once we reached horizontal resolutions of 1280+.

      4:3 is far from perfect - but it suits my needs much better than 16:9 (or even 16:10.) Now if I could get a 1200x1920 at 17" - that would be an improvement over my UXGA 1600x1200... but I'm not holding my breath - a 17" TFT display makes dollar signs sp light up in the eyes of monitor manufacturers.

  72. No kidding!! by itomato · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Where are the UVXGA++ panels?

    WTF gives? A TV that does the same resolution (and image quality) as a laptop from 1996 that costs as much as a entire laptop in 2004?

    Please - someone explain.

    1. Re:No kidding!! by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

      Standing around in the shop trying to figure it out, an LCD TV has:

      • Reasonable reaction time
      • High brightness, high contrast
      • Reasonable colour accuracy
      • A very wide viewing angle

      It of course also has a very low resolution and a higher tolerance to defects... So yeah, you'd think they'd be cheaper than flat panel computer monitors, but they're not and they're not quite the same thing.

  73. Yes and no... by raehl · · Score: 1

    Things also become cheap because manufacturing technology improves, and it becomes cheaper to actually manufacture the item in the first place.

  74. Do you mean 17" LCD monitor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I assume that you meant that you could buy a 17" LCD monitor for $250-300 after rebate. If that's the case, your post is right on.

  75. But for that price... by 192939495969798999 · · Score: 1

    I bought my 27" CRT TV a few years back, with S-Vid input, etc. all that stuff, stereo speakers built-in, etc. for I think $280. It completely rules in terms of picture quality on a CRT, easily beating the crap out of any LCD that size. HOWEVER, it is a total pain to carry or move. If I could get the exact same resolution/quality in a thinner, easier to lug package, i would've paid maybe $50 more. Any plasma screen costs thousands, still, if you want one that looks as good as a CRT -- i.e. no ghosting or weird crispiness. The others make you sit directly in front of them, which is no good at all!

    --
    stuff |
  76. Re:Does the LCD account for a big chunk of the pri by henley · · Score: 1
    A hate working on a monitor that has a little black dot in the middle of the screen. This is one advantage that CRTs still have over LCD. Maybe when resolutions get so his that a single missing pixel is effectively unnoticable, it won't bug me so much.

    Hmm. Every single LCD I've worked with with dead pixels fails with white spots, or individual colours (red/green/blue). Which is a LOT less distracting, given I mostly work with light backgrounds. Also, individual pixels are tiny.

    Not to say that it's not irritating, but I'd hardly call it unworkable....

    --

    --
    I'd rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy
  77. LCD is better for coding by SilentJ_PDX · · Score: 1

    I agree that the price difference is staggering, but I've found a 20" LCD at 1600x1200 is much more readable than a 21" CRT. Like others on this forum, I have a 1600x1200 15.1" laptop screen and it's incredibly readable. 1600x1200 on a 17" CRT (about the same screen size) is nowhere near as comfortable on the eyes.

    For gaming and so many other applications, LCDs come up short. But for small text at high resolution, an an LCD is much sharper.

    1. Re:LCD is better for coding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've got a desktop 20.1" LCD at 1600x1200, and it's definitely my preferred resolution and display size.

      I also have a laptop, but it's only 1400x1050 - which I think is a reasonable resolution for the screen size (15"), but the quality (speed, brightness, viewing angle, colors) really can't compare to my desktop LCD...

      Note that I'm using X11 (Xorg) with subpixel rendering for fonts enabled on both.

    2. Re:LCD is better for coding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Note that I'm using X11 (Xorg) with subpixel rendering for fonts enabled on both.
      Noted.

    3. Re:LCD is better for coding by imsabbel · · Score: 1

      The main problem ist that
      1) a 17" or 19" screen is PHYSCALLY not CAPAPLE of displaying 1600 pixels in one line. do the math 1600*0.25mm dot pitch = 40cm width-> you need >60 cm or 24" diagonal to be able to display that many pixels.
      All people running higher than 1152 on a 17" or 1280 on a 19" screen just do "hardware antialiasing" by bluring pixels together. Thy just dont realize that they have nowhere near the "real estate" they think they have.

      --
      HI O WISE PRINCE. WHT TOOK U SO DAM LONG?
    4. Re:LCD is better for coding by strictfoo · · Score: 1

      Your math is a little off there my friend.

      1600 * .25mm = 40cm

      40cm / 4 * 3 = 30cm (monitor ~ 4:3)

      So, sqrt(40^2 + 30^2) = 50^2 (we should all be able to compute that without our calculators, hopefully)

      50CM = ~19.7in - so ideally you'd want a 21 inch CRT monitor or a 20in LCD, but a 19in CRT does just fine here.

      I don't lose real estate, I lose picture quality.

      --
      I've just signed legislation that'll outlaw Russia forever. We'll begin bombing in five minutes.
    5. Re:LCD is better for coding by imsabbel · · Score: 1

      arg. OK. mistake seen. did mul with (4/3)^2.
      But that doesnt make the point invalid.
      Displaying more pixels per line (even if its only 100 more) than it can display, plus the fact that analog vga signals are lowpass filtered in the gfx-card->result=shit.
      A single black line wouldnt even reach 50% grey. But well, people like fizzling vinyl with its horrible spectrum fidelity, so i guess that there is a place for crts in the future, too.

      --
      HI O WISE PRINCE. WHT TOOK U SO DAM LONG?
    6. Re:LCD is better for coding by G-funk · · Score: 1

      Yeah good one mate... Sitting opposite me is a bloke I work with, on his dell with a 17" lcd running at 1600x1200 (or 1600x1040 I can't remember which). Either way, it's definitely 1600 across.

      --
      Send lawyers, guns, and money!
  78. Shut up with your goddamn pyramid scheme crap n/m by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank you.

  79. Re:Does the LCD account for a big chunk of the pri by moonbender · · Score: 1

    A hate working on a monitor that has a little black dot in the middle of the screen. ... or worse, a little white or colored dot because the pixel is stuck the other way round. Anyway, I definitely agree, this can be extremely annoying. Hopefully in a few years you won't have to put up even with dead pixels anymore - having more than a certain amount already gets you a replacement under the warranty.

    --
    Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
  80. I know this is slashdot and all that, so congrats by discovercomics · · Score: 1

    on the wedding

    But why the heck would you borrow 7 grand to get married.

  81. It's not $1000 by protein+folder · · Score: 1

    It's 1000 Swiss Francs, which works out to about $800 US. Still pretty steep, but not quite the psychological value of one grand.

    --
    Your mind is squeezed by a blast of pain!
  82. OT - Re:Why would you want one? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    OT -

    I'm getting my first projector (DLP) delivered today, so I'm a little new to this - is it really possible to correct the 'rainbow effect' via calibration? I thought it was due to hardware. My projector has a 3x wheel, so it might not be too bad. But I'm curious to know of ways to minimize the effect in case I see it.

  83. Re:At the risk of being modded offtopic... by mrak+and+swepe · · Score: 1

    Of course it's a fake; read the caption:

    It purports to be a 50 year old article, but 50 years ago no-one used "needed" as an adjective, they used "necessary". They didn't arbitrarily begin sentences with "Also", and they would have hyphenated "not yet invented technology" correctly.

  84. Re:I know this is slashdot and all that, so congra by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1
    Because we've been together for 7 years and want a really nice wedding and honeymoon.

    And we make enough to pay off all of our debt (except her student loans) in six months. We just didn't have the money *right now* like we were expecting. It took a little longer than estimated to find good paying jobs.

    So I will soon be making enough money to "waste" (my fiancee's term for "spend on computer stuff"). That is, if I let her "waste" it too. ("Waste" being my term for spending it on clothes and decorative items.)

    To be fair, she did buy me a Powerbook as a wedding present.

    --
    I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
  85. begs the question... by mshiltonj · · Score: 3, Interesting

    While a 42-inch Sony (SNE) Wega LCD TV retails for $10,000, a 42-inch plasma set can be had for about $4,500.

    Why don't they make plasma computer monitors?

    1. Re:begs the question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Think of the burn in...

      I would hate to see a ghost blue screen of death image lurking in the shadows as I play Doom 3, it would scare the hell out of me!

      plasma = burns in quickly
      LCD = no burn in

    2. Re:begs the question... by radish · · Score: 1

      Well they do in a way, my 42" plasma has a VGA and I use it with my HTPC as it's main monitor. It's just a bit big to fit on the desk :)

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

  86. Re:Does the LCD account for a big chunk of the pri by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

    Yup. In general, manufacturing setups have a given probablity of a N defects within a certain area. That probability is basically fixed at any given point of time. (As time goes on and manufacturing techniques improve, that probability goes down.)

    So if you have a 10"x7.5" display (75 square inches), the probability of the display being useless is far higher than, say, a 2"x3" (6 square inch display). In this case, the probability of a defective panel is over 10 times higher, PLUS the cost of a defective panel is significantly higher too.

    There are a couple of companies (such as Rainbow Displays, http://www.rainbowdisplays.com/) that have been trying to make large panels by tiling smaller panels together, because the price per square inch of a smaller panel is much lower than a larger one, but so far such technologies are nowhere near mainstream. (So far Rainbow only seems to be able to do it for relatively low-res displays - Good when you need a large display but not high resolution, such as an airport departures display, which is what is shown in the picture on their homepage.)

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  87. Re:What I've learned from liberals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Someone please mod that as flamebait!!

  88. Cost of manufacturing by multimed · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't know if this is just myth/urban legend or not and I haven't been able to find anything to support it either way. My brother told me that it is now actually cheaper to manufacture LCD flat panel screens than it is to make CRTs. Not that it really matters because the costs are more tied to supply & demand than actual cost of production but still, I'm curious if it's true or not. Personally the skeptic in me is torn--on one hand, if it's true, than there must be collusion and price fixing going on by the big evil companies. But on the other, if it were true, if I ran a company that made LCDs, I'd slash the prices and sell so many of them that the huge gross profits would make the smaller margins irrelevant, and since no one is doing this it must not be true.

    --
    Vote Quimby.
  89. projector + projection screen system cost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Any recommendations on a

    projector (low noise a must)
    projector screen
    tiny sound subsystem

    for a projection distance of 15 feet onto a 8 foot floor to ceiling wall area

    Lower cost options preferred

  90. Just in Time production by Firethorn · · Score: 1
    As most, if not all, of LCD production is in Asia, for the market in the USA you have to factor in the time it takes to boat the products, that means that they need a lead of at least a month. And yeah, you probably had a dozen or so companies that thought that LCD TV's would really take off and overproduced.

    Look for cheap LCD TV's right after christmas...

    Why haven't I gotten an LCD TV yet? Because
    1. They're so much more than CRT style TV's.
    2. Ones in my price range are smaller than my older CRT.
    3. I don't have any HiDef content anyways
    4. I don't watch much TV.
    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  91. Amen! by hom · · Score: 1

    I'm going to build my own projector when i can find a lcd at the right price. I'm looking at about $350 for a 1024x768 projector.
    Check out lumenlab for good examples of DIY projectors.
    Don't buy their "plans" though...information should be free, and IS free on many web sites (google "diy projector" for a start).

    If i get really industrious i will try to have the projector open up so the lcd can be used without projecting.

  92. Re:I know this is slashdot and all that, so congra by phurley · · Score: 1

    Wait till you have a house and she starts to decorate -- then even a relatively heavy computer habit can look cheap :-)

    --
    Home Automation & Linux -- now I know I'm a geek
  93. RI'll tell you where *I* want to put one... by NerveGas · · Score: 1


    I've been planning for some time to tear the tile out above the bathtub faucets, frame a nice space in the wall, and put an LCD TV in there with some plexiglass over it. Simpsons while soaking, baby.

    When I was younger, I'd read in the bathtub until I fell asleep. I guess I've degenerated since then.

    steve

    --
    Oh, you're not stuck, you're just unable to let go of the onion rings.
    1. Re:RI'll tell you where *I* want to put one... by genixia · · Score: 1

      Fair enough. But you're not like most people.

      Nor am I actually. I want an LCD mounted on the ceiling above my bed. That way I could like falt on my back and relax whilst watching TV in bed, rather than strain my neck and back whilst trying to retain some sembelance of comfort.

      Of course, my wife is perfectly happy with the CRT on the dresser. Probably 'cos she nicks my pillows.

  94. finally affordable by nazsco · · Score: 1

    my 14" cellphone!

  95. Slashdot Gift Cards. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Wait till you have a house and she starts to decorate -- then even a relatively heavy computer habit can look cheap :-)"

    Shop at one of those "clubs" were you get everything discounted. Makes it cheaper to furnish a house. The other way is to go to factory outlet stores. A bit of driving, but you can get some great prices.

  96. LCD TV Website by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    for more discussion check out LCD TV Reviews lots of talk about LCD TV's and Digital TV issues

  97. Repairing/Replacing LCD Screens-iLCD. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Perhaps a market for aftermarket LCD screens could taqake advantage of the surplus."

    Well we all could put more informative front panel displays on our computers. Instead of beep codes, the information is on the front panel. Stick a touch sensitive layer on the front, and you'll have your controls right there ala iPod..

  98. Why aren't customers buying LCD TVs? by AnalogDiehard · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Because the more channels the cable companies shove into our homes, the less there is to watch.

    Because the more crap that Hollywood puts out (Gigli anyone?) the less there is to watch on HBO/Cinemax/Showtime/et al.

    What's the point of spending four digits when there isn't anything on worth watching?

    Is there marketspeak for "DUUUH"?

    --
    Eternity: will that be smoking, or non-smoking? I Corinthians 6:9-10
    1. Re:Why aren't customers buying LCD TVs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is there marketspeak for "DUUUH"?

      Yeah, that's a no-brainer!

    2. Re:Why aren't customers buying LCD TVs? by a24061 · · Score: 1
      Is there marketspeak for "DUUUH"?

      It translates as "We blame pirates on teh interweb for all our problems."

  99. That would be one hell of a belt clip-Hospital. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When asked by one of the patrons of a biker bar...

    "Twenty-one inches of pure happiness! Want to see it?"

  100. you completely misunderstand rainbows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It isn't rainbow fringing, it is rainbows. Single-chip DLPs use sequential color. That is, they display the entire red frame, then the green frame and the blue frame. Although this is rapid, when your eyes move, you can see rainbows due to the sequential color. What is white breaks as if through a prism.

    No amount of calibration will correct for this. The only solution is to go to simultaneous color. You could theoretically rotate your colors faster to get around it, but that's going to take a while. Faster rotation has reduced the annoyance of rainbows, but they haven't gone away.

    I definitely would consider LCD, it's my primary candidate right now (although I currently have a 36" direct view HDTV tube). It looks great, and having seen what can be done with smaller LCDs (like the one on the Sony DSC-T1), OLED doesn't stand a chance against LCD. The new tiny panel of electron emitters system (like Colorray pushed years ago) looks like it could do well too.

    As ot your cheap projector, I suppose the projector was cheap, but front projection is not my bag, not that of many. Light control and long cables cost money. And rearranging your room isn't always an option.

    Right now, the only way to go is the Sony Grand Wega LCD RPTVs for most people. Why? Because they are cheap, and perform fairly well. They don't use sequential color. They might not last as long as a DLP or other technologies, but given the limitations of current units (often sequential color, not full 1920x1080 res), you're looking at replacing your unit in a few years anyway. So why buy a more expensive unit?

  101. Re:The Next Wave: Optical Interference Displays by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uh, LCDs can be as bright as you make the backlight (try looking into a projector). Its the contrast thats the issue.

  102. If CRTs are such monstrous power hogs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Then you must be extremely concerned about the new P4s. The average 17" CRT runs at 130watts while the dual core P4s are expected to start at 200watts while idle. Not only is the CPU a hog, but in order to cool it you'll need to run a monster high speed fan. The power supply itself will cost you more than a 17" CRT monitor.

    1. Re:If CRTs are such monstrous power hogs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I seriously doubt any CPU runs at 200W, much less when idle. That's just FUD, plain and simple. The first 3.2 P4 that came out runs at 80W, with the newer stuff just reaching 100W.

      Also, new P4s will be using smaller process than current CPUs. I just got one of those 'flower' copper heat sinks for my P4 3.2, and I can run it fine 24x7, playing games, encoding music/movies, without the fan even running. As it is though, it gets a little warm in my computer room (south facing), so I run the fan at low speed, can't even hear it over the case fans and hard drives.

  103. Re:The Next Wave: Optical Interference Displays by badmammajamma · · Score: 1

    LCDs also last siginifcantly longer than CRTs.

    --
    Any man who afflicts the human race with ideas must be prepared to see them misunderstood. -- H. L. Mencken
  104. Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We've got 4 TVs and 2 CRT monitors at home. The TVs range in age from 27 years to 14 years. The CRTS are 6 and 10 years old, respectively. They all work great.

    The LCDs I've seen seem to begin losing contrast after a few years. Not acceptable.

  105. Delivery too? by hughk · · Score: 1

    Certainly an LCD display is lighter and requires a lot smaller carton for shipping. This must account for something too as these things are coming from the far-east.

    --
    See my journal, I write things there
  106. Re:*raises* the question... by thesilverbail · · Score: 1

    You mean it raises the question. To beg the question means to assume that what you are trying to prove is already true.

    --
    I have found a truly wonderful proof of Fermat's Last Theorem, but unfortunately this sig is too small to contain it.
  107. Re:The Next Wave: Optical Interference Displays by lcsjk · · Score: 1
    How long do you want it to last before it is replaced as obsolete technology?

    I just purchased a new TV after using my Mitsubishi for 18 years. The problem had nothing to do with the CRT. The focusing electronics were deteriorating, but still good enough to watch. It had all the features available on most TVs today, including an amp for driving remote speakers. It cost me $400 then and the replacement CRT unit with the same features still costs $400.

  108. Sports by Prien715 · · Score: 1

    Now, like many geeks, I'm not a huge sports fan unless it comes to CS tournaments.

    But larger screens do allow for better sports viewing. Imagine trying to watch hockey on a 15 inch TV and trying to find the puck (if you even have remotely bad vision). There's a reason why sports bars invest in plasma TVs (but if, as you argue with movies, you drank 6 $2 beers every monday night (football) at a sports bar, it'd still take you ~10 years to afford a $6K TV).

    --
    -- Political fascism requires a Fuhrer.
  109. LCD tv reviews by kallistiblue · · Score: 3, Informative
    The digital tv interest remains high. The problem is that the $3000 is still a lot to pay for a tv, even if the picture is incredible.
    There are several tv's including new Syntax Olivia tv is a good value. Dell also seems to be aggressively trying to drive price down. Coming OLED technology and the prices should be very reasonable in 3 years or so.

    So the future looks good.

    --
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  110. Re:Does the LCD account for a big chunk of the pri by Moofie · · Score: 1

    You don't happen to have a Trinitron monitor, do you?

    Because I wouldn't want to ruin it.

    --
    Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  111. OT: Re:Why TVs? by Big_Al_B · · Score: 1

    If you are too close they look grainy. My friend had one. It is really cool, but you have to sit so far away for it not to look pixelated.

    All projectors are not created equal. A lot of LCD projectors (and LCD TVs) share that "through a screen-door" grain at close range. But not all.

    DLP technology TVs and projectors don't look grainy at all, and they are the roughly the same price.

    Plus can you get an HDTV projector?

    Of course. Most projectors aimed at the home theater/TV market will display analog, SD (480i), ED (480p), and HD (720p/1080i) source material.

    One cavaet is that many require external anolog or digital tuners, so you either need to purchase a terrestrial HD tuner (~$300), or get HD service from your cable/sat provider for a monthly premium.

    Another cavaet is that true HD resolution projectors capable of native 1080i or 720p are still pricey, and the cheaper "HD" projectors down-convert HD images to something less. Joe Consumer would not notice a difference in most cases, but...

    Also, then you have to deal with hanging it or mounting it soemwhere. It looks tacky

    If you're planning a dedicated room, you can completely integrate the projector mount into the room architecture. Even If you're only updating a living room TV, it could be done in a non-tacky manner by any good AV installer.

  112. There is a good reason. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They suffer from burn in more than any CRT built in the last 200 years. (Yes even more than those from (1845)
    So i pulled the values out of my kabooze, but plasma screens are known to suffer from baaad burn in, even from elements like news tickers on regular tv programing. Hence they are bad for gaming and computer applications.

    Maciek

  113. Televisions go flat: The Abstract by cmholm · · Score: 1
    As it turns out, my hardcopy of The Economist hit my mailbox yesterday. The gist of the article:

    The plasma and LCD OEMs overestimated demand at the initial price points last Xmas and early '04, so everyone except the consumers are sitting on a lot of stock.

    A number of large LCD plants have or are about to come online, pushing down the prices for TV and computer displays.

    Thus, LCDs in the 30 to 45 inch category are becoming price-competitive with plasma displays. However, plasmas still have performance advantages, especially when watching sports.

    As a result, I think it's pretty obvious that those of us who held back at Costco last Xmas are going to reap rewards this time.

    --
    Luke, help me take this mask off ... Just for once, let me butterfly kiss you with my own eyes.
  114. need bigger CRTs!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1600x1200 is way too small for my taste. I prefer CRTs because I run it at least 1920x1440 if not 2048x1536. The "flat" screen hype totally killed the development of bigger CRTs. The biggest size CRTs are still 24" and the price hasn't gone down because there's no demand. (every friggin person's mother want a sleek flat panel)

    Albeit the CRTs weight a ton more, moving it once every few years is not a big deal for me.

  115. easily solved problem... by avdp · · Score: 1

    I do this all time....

    I go look at the stuff in a store like BestBuy (specifically to see if it feels rights in my hands, etc) then I buy it on NewEgg for cheaper (and not taxes).

    Occasionally when I just couldn't wait, I bought it at BestBuy AND at Newegg, and when the Newegg shipment arrives, I'd return the one I bought at BestBuy.

    But I rarely ever buy anything at retail stores like BestBuy or CompUSA. Their prices are NEVER competitive.

    1. Re:easily solved problem... by pod · · Score: 1

      You're not solving the problem. The parent specifically refers to cases where individual products with the same SKU differ in quality. That is sometimes the case with displays, where you just don't know what it'll look like until you open the box and hook it up, no matter how many of the same model you've seen before. Most other things are either cheap enough (most peripherals) and many can't be tested before purchase (like add-on cards, hard drives, etc), but displays (CRT and LCD) are complex enough, important enough, expensive enough, and easy enough to hook up for a quick demo before carting out of the store.

      --
      "Hot lesbian witches! It's fucking genius!"
    2. Re:easily solved problem... by avdp · · Score: 1

      I don't think that's what he was refering to, but if he was - then he's out of his mind. All he is ever going to "touch" is the display model. There is not one store that I know of that will let you open up the box (especially most items are wrapped in those things you can only open with scisors these days) just so that you can make sure it "feel" the same as the display model. Not gonna happen.

      Also there is no store than that I know off that will open the box and plug in a monitor just so you can see if all the pixels are working.

      But again, I don't think it's what he was refering to. He was refering to he can't judge the "feel" of an item by the specs on a website. I can relate to that.

    3. Re:easily solved problem... by Wanker · · Score: 1

      I actually meant exactly what pod thought. I've have surprisingly good luck getting the sales guys to cart out a couple of monitors for me to compare on their demo systems. It's generally quite simple, I say to them "I've researched all the LCDs on the market, and the one I want is this model you have, the SuperWhammyDyne Model 4000. You guys sell it for an excellent price, but I've heard that the quality between units can vary a lot. Rather than have me buy one and have to exchange it tomorrow, could we just hook one up now to be sure that it's OK?"

      I've had both CompUSA and Best Buy do this for me. It probably helps that I look and sound like a "serious customer" to them.

      If you absolutely can't find a store to do this for you (I would be surprised, unless you look/act like a hooligan) then bring your laptop and leave it in the car. Also bring a 12VDC -> 120VAC inverter, then just walk outside, try the display there on your laptop, and bring it right back. (Car inverters are limited to about 100W, so this won't work with large CRT monitors.) Maybe after the second round of this they'll figure out that it's easier to just let you look in-store. :-)

  116. Of course they can. by uberdave · · Score: 1

    I don't think corporations can do much about supply and demand...

    Boy are you mistaken. Corporations can cause demand to increase. It's called Marketing. Every commercial, every radio spot, every advertisment, every billboard has as it's sole purpose to create demand for a product. Corporations can also affect the supply. Consider the OPEC oil cartel. They frequently adjust their production, and therefore the price of oil/gasoline.

  117. How about 8192 x 3840? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  118. Re:The Next Wave: Optical Interference Displays by pdabbadabba · · Score: 0

    Well, reassuring to hear that OIDs will be at least "more useful than an oil slick on a puddle" :)

    Quite an endorsement.

  119. Amen. by SoTuA · · Score: 1

    Exactly. I've had problems watching tennis at home on my 21" sony. Can't really see the ball, unless they have superb cameras on the venue, or the court provides very good natural contrast (i.e. clay courts wich are brick-red vs green balls)

  120. Their gain by phorm · · Score: 1

    However, quite often their gain is your loss. Generally one doesn't gain from a corp (unless you're affiliated with it: shareholders etc), unless the corp is also gaining something. The best one can usually hope for is to "lose less" from one corp over another.

  121. Re:The Next Wave: Optical Interference Displays by xenoandroid · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Those of us who are easily annoyed by the high pitched ringing CRT TVs make also like LCDs.

    Also those negative points don't seem to really be a problem with the LCD in front of me.

  122. I was just going to wait in line for a $ 4,000 TV by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Supply and Demand strikes again!

    The prices they charge,
    the market finds unbearable.

    When a 48" HDTV LCD is $399,
    they should sell a little better...

  123. youre right, my bad by mrsev · · Score: 1

    sorry aobut that the real link is,

    http://www.tomshardware.com/display/20030319/ind ex .html

  124. PS2 outputs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    PS2 outputs 480p. And 480p has nothing to do with widescreen. You can have 4:3 480i, 4:3 480p, 16:9 480i and 16:9 480p. Any game can be viewed in widescreen, although some are designed to look right in 16:9, some aren't. This is true on Xbox and PS2. Thus many of your games are highly distorted.

    There are more 480p games on Xbox than PS2, although it is becoming more and more common on PS2. Oddly, Nintendo just dropped 480p from the Gamecube hardware to make it cheaper.

    1. Re:PS2 outputs by rjstanford · · Score: 1

      PS2 outputs 480p. And 480p has nothing to do with widescreen. You can have 4:3 480i, 4:3 480p, 16:9 480i and 16:9 480p.

      Yup. But at the time PS2 had almost no widescreen games, whereas everything I wanted on the XBOX supported widescreen. Likewise, I didn't see anything to allow the PS2 to push 480p - at least at the time I bought my XBOX.

      Any game can be viewed in widescreen, although some are designed to look right in 16:9, some aren't. This is true on Xbox and PS2. Thus many of your games are highly distorted.

      Nope, they all look fine. And yes, I can tell the difference.

      But why the !@#*@ are you arguing and trying to tell me what my games look like on my tv? More to the point, why did I just waste my time replying?

      [sigh]

      --
      You're special forces then? That's great! I just love your olympics!
  125. Re:The Next Wave: Optical Interference Displays by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    The answer is just around the corner: optical interference displays (OIDs). They produce far sharper and brighter images than an LCD. The OID also consumes less power than an LCD.

    I wouldn't expect them to be very cheap at all though, Iridigm is the only company that makes them. Well, Qualcomm soon if you read that latest press release.

    Possibly around the corner for phones, I'm not holding my breath for anything bigger. It does sound like neat tech though.

  126. 21" LED screen? by CrazyJim0 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Sounds like a gaint light bright.

    God exists, he spoke to me:

    www.geocities.com/James_Sager_PA

  127. No reason to buy... yet. by SeaFox · · Score: 1

    This continues to be a chicken and the egg problem. Wsn't the whole idea of buying flat screen T.V.'s because of HDTV, 16x9 and digital broadcasts becoming the norm? They haven't yet. Why buy an expensive set now, and then an extra box in a year or two for digital broadcast compatability when hit shows are still available on POTS (plain old television sets :-D ). Producers/broadcasters/advertisers don't want the shows shown excusively on the new digital channels, because such a small margin of their viewers/buyers have those sets. But consumers have no real incentive to get a wide/LCD/HDTV set as long as all their favorite shows are on the 4+ yr old set they have. I personally would like to buy a new LCD TV and hang it on the wall. But they are too damn expensive! I'm predicting they will fall quite a bit after the digital broadcast law by the FCC goes into effect. Millions of consumers will find themselves needing to buy a converter or a new TV, and they will balk at the prices the way they are now.

  128. I'll do it for him.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    purchase and being a retard justification.

  129. Plasma monitors by sbszine · · Score: 1

    Why don't they make plasma computer monitors?

    They used to make them for laptops in the 90s, and as monochrome desktop displays for early graphics stuff. They were known as gas plasma displays. In laptop land they were quickly superceded by LCDs, which had improved battery life. In desktop land they were replaced by colour CRTs which were cheaper and refreshed faster.

    --

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  130. ...get with the program. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, why would anyone the premium price for the LCD television?

    1.) Uses 30% of the electricity over a tube based unit.
    2.) Throws less heat into the room, saving on AC costs.
    3.) Less eye strain, saves on health care.
    etc.

    Another case of where spending less up front results in spending more long term. LCDs have many benefits over CRTs...do your homework.

  131. Re:The Next Wave: Optical Interference Displays by AaronGTurner · · Score: 1
    The monitor I use at home (SGI badged Sony GDM) is 12 years old and still going strong. My mother uses one from the same batch without problems, and my wife also had one until we moved 3 years ago and she took the opportunity to replace it with an LCD screen. We'd have to wait another 9 years to see if her LCD screen lasts as long as the CRT.

    This wouldn't be a fair test, of course. LCD technology may have the potential to be more long lived, but there are all sorts of other components that may fail even if the LCD component itself is still going strong and technology gets outdated rapidly and repair or replacement of an LCD screen may not be economic or even possible 5 years after initial production.

    With my wife's screen and mine I'd be comparing a relatively budget monitor (the LCD) with one supplied originally with a $3000 UNIX workstation that may have better build quality in all the peripheral bits such as power regulation and the like.

  132. Re:Does the LCD account for a big chunk of the pri by jokkebk · · Score: 1

    The fact that you don't believe it doesn't make it any less true. From what I have heard, color LCD costs around 30 dollars/euros, which is quite a large portion of the price - between 20% and 30% of the low-end models.

    Especially when you consider the fact that assembling, transporting and the retailer get their fair share, you'll see that a five-dollar price cut could make a huge impact on mobile phone manufacturers' profit margins.

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