Where Are All the High-Resolution Desktop Displays?
MrSeb writes "Ever since the release of the iPhone 4 with its 326 pixels-per-inch (PPI) Retina display, people have wondered about the lack of high-PPI desktop displays. The fact is, high-resolution desktop displays do exist, but they're incredibly expensive and usually only used for medical applications. Here, ExtremeTech dives into the world of desktop displays and tries to work out why consumer-oriented desktop displays seem to be stuck at 1920x1080, and whether future technologies like IGZO and OLED might finally spur manufacturers to make reasonably-priced models with a PPI over 100."
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It's because of 2 reasons.
1) It's currently "good enough" for most people
2) Because of the 1080 standard which has a large advantage due to economy of volume sales which would be lost with constant incremental improvements
Basically, the cost is not justified for it's marketability (in most manufacturer's eyes).
In 1998 SGI was ahead of the pack. @ 110dpi
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SGI_1600SW
Neither of the most popular desktop operating systems (Windows, OS X) work very well at arbitrary DPI. Windows is surprisingly ahead of OS X at the OS level, but lots of windows applications misbehave if you change the DPI settings. For example hard-coded interface layouts can mean that controls will be displayed outside the window area and are therefore inaccessible.
Chicken-and-egg: if such monitors were cheap and widespread, OS makers would quickly adjust.
.sig withheld by request
Manufacturers took the easy way out and consolidated everything based on TV specs.
My 10+ year old LCD monitors are better than what you can buy today. I have four 1600x1200 20" monitors and my laptop from 2002 has a 15" 1600x1200 screen. Think about that ten year old laptop screen, it's 130 DPI. Where is my 24" 130 DPI screen?
We had the technology and it was lost due to stupidity.
2560x1600 30" is 100.63dpi. This is exactly what the article writer was complaining about; stagnent DPI.
If that resolution was on a 9" screen then you would have roughly the equivalent DPI as an iPhone.
Rod Taylor
The DuraVision FDH3601 from EIZO is one example.
Expect to pay tens of thousands of dollars for it, though - these are targeted at oil companies and government.
Conveniently, the latest Intel chipsets can apparently handle such "4K" resolutions.
Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
Build it and they will come.
There's no incentive for developers to make their software 'scale' if said developers don't themselves have access to high dpi screens on which to test and develop.
sure you can build a 10" display with mega dpi, but imagine the hardware required to drive a 20" or 30" version, 4 or 9 times the VRAM and bandwidth. Not to mention the manufacturing issues associated with producing zero dead pixels at high dpi values on large display panels.
There was an unknown error in the submission.
A pad or phone is usually held closer to the eye than a screen on a laptop or desktop is placed. At normal distances, (say, two feet) a 20-inch 1080x1920 monitor's dot pitch is barely visible. A 5-inch monitor held 6-inches from the eye will need exactly the same resolution to appear as clear.
On the larger end, the lack of computer sales volume seems to have led manufacturers to limit cheaper large-screen offerings to HD -sized playback; one can still find professional large-screen monitors with enormous resolutions for photo- and video editing at very high prices. ,
1. It's a lot more expensive 2. The vast majority of people won't notice, at all.
Such monitors better become available soon. I'm annoyed that my 24" monitor has a fraction of the resolution of the iPad 3.
What about bit depth? A bazillion pixels is all well and good, but I still find it frustrating that those pixels are limited to 256 grey levels. What would it take to bump displays up an extra couple of bits per channel? Or even doubling them? I think the visual improvement from HDR would trump that of higher pixel density, at least in the things that matter to me (games and movies).
I don't care about DPI, I care about resolution. Laptop standards have degraded. A high powered laptop now has a 1920x1080 screen where as 18 months ago they has 1920x1200. Lovely downgrade. Hurray progress?
..forgot to use mycleanpc did we?
That might have been high dpi, but the resolution was nothing special. In 2001 IBM blew that out of the water @ 204dpi covering a full 22", and nothing sine has come close. It's the only piece of computer hardware where "I wish they made 'em like they used to" comes to mind.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_T221
Things are about to change. In a couple of days, Apple will refresh all of their laptop and desktop machines with Retina displays. Once they do this, it won't be long before PC manufacturers start moving to higher-res displays, in order to keep up. Exactly the same happened with the MacBook Air and Intel's Ultrabook initiative.
8 brazillian DPI is a marketing ploy
Anything kinky is a marketing ploy, but they're effective ploys. Lots of people will buy the video.
Oh, wait...
What are you talking about? I have been using a 2560x1600 30" for years. It runs 1080p in a little window.
IBM had a super hi-res (3kx2k?) a decade ago, but they pulled it. Wiki: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_T220/T221_LCD_monitors
You mean THIS one? It is The (sadly discontinued) 3840×2400, 22-inch IBM T221 -- 204 PPI!
I got the picture from TFA. The description above was the caption of the photo. Rather than looking up the monitor in Wikipedia, you could have just said, "TFA".
There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
That is only true for watching full-screen images, like movies or games. Put desktop applications on there, and the extra elbow room you get from more pixels in the same area running in high density is a great reward.
Can you really not see the pixels? I suspect something to be wrong with your eyes.
"Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
TFA actually addresses that explicitly. In fact, it's the thrust of the entire article. "As I type this, I’m sitting ~32 inches away from a 27-inch monitor with a resolution of 1920×1080, or 81.59 PPI. At that distance, my monitor would need to pack at least 107 PPI (pixels per inch) in order to qualify as a Retina display."
It's nice to see a "4k" display that's actually 4096 pixels across. That term is unfortunately also used for 4x 1080p, or 3840x2160.
As I've suggested before, the existence of ill-behaved applications is one major reason why we don't have high-DPI monitors. (And as others have pointed out, the low cost of 1080p TV panels is another.) Windows 7 scales DPI pretty well, but some applications go out of their way to break it.
There have been strong rumors for a while that Apple is preparing a Retina Display for the new MacBook Pro. If they keep the price point to $999 (and they did a good job of maintaining existing price points on the new iPad), it might be a good deal even for those of us who don't care for OSX – just blow off the default image and install Windows 7. The ultrabook market, like the tablet market, is one area where Apple is actually competitive in price.
Also, at the most recent consumer electronics shows, many TV manufacturers have demonstrated quad-HD (3840x2160) sets. While these will be very expensive at first, they will be heavily pushed as the next big thing, and prices will go down to reasonable levels eventually. I currently use a 32" 1080p TV as my monitor; it works great, but you can see a tiny bit of pixelation if you lean in close. A Quad HD 32" TV would be a retina display in all but name.
Good news: the 4k television standard is going to break this egg by delivering a working chicken, and computers will then promptly figure out how to adjust.
"Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
I've got 1900x1200 on my Inspiron 6400. I'll do everything I can to keep this thing alive, put up with the speed and lack of memory, just to have this native resolution. I code, and vertical resolution is very important.
The man who dies rich dies disgraced. -- Andrew Carnegie
Not me. I'd rather have current resolution and anti-aliasing than a slightly higher resolution. Also I like not needing to have Quad-SLI to run last-gen games at low settings.
I'm currently running a 19" monitor at 1440x900, when the next-gen graphics cards come out I'll probably upgrade to 1920x1200 (or 1080 if I have to) in the 20-22" range, and that will be good enough for me.
You're old and blind. Most likely senile, too.
Deal.
Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
Those of us that have better- than-average vision beg to differ.
Please stand clear of the doors, por favor mantenganse alejado de las puertas
Can you see the pixels on your 1080p screen?
Yes?
Bad news: There will never be a 4K television standard
"His name was James Damore."
TFA actually addresses that explicitly. In fact, it's the thrust of the entire article. "As I type this, I’m sitting ~32 inches away from a 27-inch monitor with a resolution of 1920×1080, or 81.59 PPI. At that distance, my monitor would need to pack at least 107 PPI (pixels per inch) in order to qualify as a Retina display."
TFA is whining about nothing. It claims
we need to first acknowledge that higher PPI displays do exist. Newegg stocks multiple 27-inch displays with a 2560×1440 resolution in the $850-$1600 range. At 108 PPI, that’s high enough to qualify as a Retina display at a nominal 32-inch (80cm) viewing distance.
And then he has has a little sad about them being too expensive, but the fact is that you can buy brand new 27-inch 2560x1440 ips displays for around $300 if you are just willing to look around a little.
These give a retina display at the nominal distance he quotes. The dude needs to google around a little more.
You can never know everything, and part of what you do know will always be wrong. Perhaps even the most important part.
Bad news: There will never be a 4K television standard
Sure there will. Having sold us the same films first in DVD and then in HD Blu-Ray, the only remaining step for the studios (aside from crappy 3D conversions that few are buying) is to sell them again in 4K. There are currently talks between Sony and other studios and manufacturers to come up with a 4K Blu-Ray specification.
It's connection information reveals response to TFA. Such resolutions with meaningful refresh rate means at least 3 DVI connectors. You basically can't push more data through wires.
Sure there will. I can even tell you exactly when. Febuary 23rd at 5:44am during the year of the linux desktop.
Violence is like duct tape. If it doesn't solve the problem, you didn't use enough.
"Apple is preparing a Retina Display for the new MacBook Pro. If they keep the price point to $999"
A) the cheapest Macbook Pro is currectly $1200, and now they are going to be adding a super advanced low produce screen that no other manu is using.
B) expect the Retina Macbooks to be in the $2000-2500 range.
If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
Just use GTK+ and it will scale
English characters on a 1080p screen at a reasonable distance for the usage model aren't too bad (ex. 23" diagonal @ arms length or a bit further, 12-14 point fonts). Many Chinese characters are still jaggy as hell to me at similar font sizes, though. Age has taken away my post-lasik 20/15 vision, so I don't think I am a corner case. Maybe it is time for a touch-up job.
I'd like to see high resolution displays as much as the next guy, but it's much less necessary on desktop displays and television sets.
I'm sure someone will freak out about me saying that, but here's the thing: it's not just about DPI, but about the viewing distance. The reason the retina display is called "retina" is that (we can argue about the validity of the claim, but...) it's roughly the maximum resolution discernible by the human eye at the distance you're expected to view a smartphone. That is, approximately a foot away from your eyes.
Your desktop display should be about 3 feet from your eyes. My TV at home sits... I don't know, somewhere around 12 feet from my eyes. Though it might be really cool to get a 300 dpi television, I'm not sure it makes sense to worry about it when you're talking about a television that's 12 feet away.
"Ever since the release of the iPhone 4 with its 326 pixels-per-inch (PPI) Retina display, people have wondered about the lack of high-PPI desktop displays"
I'm pretty sure gamers have been wondering about this a heck of a lot longer than that!
I don't know if gamers in recent years care as much about this.
If you're sitting on a couch 6+ feet from a TV or you're sitting a couple feet from a 27" monitor, I think putting more pixels per inch has diminishing returns relatively quickly.
Personally, I'd be very interested in higher resolutions for larger displays, but the PPI issue is not as important to me.
And all our yesterdays have lighted fools The way to dusty death. --Will
No idea how old it is but I'm using a 1920x1440, 23" CRT. It's basically irreplaceable. I got it off a relative about 5 years ago.
Yes it weighs 90lbs but I care more about actual function than formfactor. Why am I the only one?
I'm the owner of a 27" IPS monitor from Hazro which has a resolution of 2560x1440. I paid £450 for it. The panel in it is the exact panel that is put in the Apple Cinema Displays (which cost £900). Best monitor I've ever used - my productivity increased dramatically when I got it. It doesn't even need much in the way of horsepower to run it either. I was using an Nvidia GTX 470 however that died when my PSU blew and I'm temporarily using a very old 8800GT which handles it perfectly, even with numerous applications on numerous desktops with compiz on.
High resolution without AA > low res with AA.
B) expect the Retina Macbooks to be in the $2000-2500 range.
Since I correctly halved the consensus guess of the original iPad at $500, I'll also guess we'll see a retina Macbook Air for $999.
Apple doesn't like changing prices, up or down. The only precident for such is the Mac mini, which did have a price jump for the lowest model.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
There is no reason why Moore's law shouldn't also apply for displays, but there are/where a few stumbling blocks along the way:
-Manufacture collusion - for far too long a good portion of the manufactures where artificially controlling the price, and in turn holding back innovation and competition...
-Cable standards - Getting a sufficient amount of data to the screen is still a problem, current DisplayPort cable are barely capable of 4K...
-OS support - Better that is was a few years ago, but there still seems to be a prevailing view that high-PPI means small text rather than crisp text...
-Changing Markets - Computer where once the realm of tech. heads(who knew what was good and not), but times have changed, computer are largely consumer devices, bought by people who don't realise that FullHD is all probability a lower rez./PPI monitor than the CRT they had ten years ago...
-A change of tides in the management of the IT - Most IT company both hardware and software, are now run by non-technical management types seeking shot term goals to satisfying their myopic bonus objectives, rather than the tradition model of perusing long-term technical-research-development objectives...
As to the article, nice that they mentioned the IBM T220, I don't subscribe to their conclusions(obviously); chances are its just apple astroturfing...
I suppose it's not so easy to create cheap retina display. Let's remember that only iPhone and iPad have it even in the niche of smartphones. And another reason is that we use smartphone or tablet much closer to our eyes than usual monitor, so higher dpi is more noticeable
HD killed the mass market for higher and high definition displays. All the notebooks, even desktop displays no longer had to fight over resolutions, they all just went "HD". and hence the mass market settled on 'HD". The display makers were pleased, they could finally stop building new production lines every time DPI went up every 6 months before they got their capex back. The laptop makers were pleased, they could stop worrying about competing on display resolution in the mass market and spam out "HD" or even "HD Ready" on everything (HD Ready was SD with HDMI input...what a scam in itself". There are some interesting articles about how this phenomena killed the race for higher DPI displays in the mass market. Its been going on for years, the longest stagnation in the display mass market since the introduction of the PC to the masses............
Real men don't need signitures!!!
Yeah, this article's assumptions about pricing already seem like some quaint notions around three years out of date. These higher-res monitors are now appearing in retail:
EQ276W 27" LED Monitor
Da Blog
You forgot to factor in distance to the screen. 100dpi on a monitor 24" away is like 300dpi on a phone 8" away.
You're comparing a commonly available retail product with something off ebay where you need to ship it back to Korea if anything goes wrong?
Anyway, wanting something nice, I had a major surprise trying to find something larger that 1080p.....I shopped around and finally found the best deal I could on a Dell u2711....2560x1440.
I paid about $800 on it, most priced it then about $1K.
I was shocked, not so much at the price, which was steeper than I'd thought...but at the sheer lack of higher resolution monitors out there even available.
I mean...nice that TVs are all nice 1080p, but the influence has seemingly killed the computer monitor market.
I guess like how the general public has forgotten what good sound reproduction can be, and the value of it.....we've lost how nice a higher end resolution monitor can be for working. Sure...multiple monitors are nice, but why not START with a nice big high resolution one...and later..save and pair THAT with a 2nd nice one?
Sure is nice having a LOT on one screen....having multiple 'screens' with lots of real estate on them is even nicer.....double that eventually..and..well...
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
of the IPad 1 & 2, and there's no other comparable competitor for that product either. Kinda makes your prediction sound silly.
Hell, I'd like bigger if I had a bigger place to put one...why limit yourself?
For computer work, especially if you're getting into DSLR full frame cameras that are coming out...for stills and the high end HD video...a high resolution monitor is really nice for post processing.
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
I don't need the "retina" aspect of it, I want the _pixels_. Even with virtual desktops I'm always running out of room...I'd be more efficient with a bigger screen.
Sure, you can go multimonitor (and I do) but the gap between the screens just annoys me.
It works great for websites though: make all dimensions (font-sizes, borders widths, padding etc.) relative to the font-size, then scale the font size of the document by using media queries triggered by screen widths -- use .svg for icons, done! The higher your resolution is, the nicer it looks.
So why can't GUI toolkits have units that are relative to viewport and window size? Not saying they don't have those "somewhere in there", but they obviously aren't used if they exist. So why can't they "just" allow user configuration of what a "legacy pixel" is, and *force* legacy apps to use relative units instead? As another benefit, this would allow you to scale all apps, or each individually, depending on usage, monitor and eyesight quality.
Anyone remember stuff like "Magic User Interface" on the Amiga, which made everything nice and pretty, in a super configurable way, by hooking into system calls for GUI widgets? It still had pixels but those were different times, the principle would be the same, and maybe even old windows apps could be retrofitted that way, even more so Qt or GTK. Just hook into everything before it draws.
I won't claim it would be trivial, but come on, you know you want this...
You're not the only one, brother. I'm still running on an old 23" CRT that does 2048x1536 @ 120hz ...it also has kelvin color temperature controls (and sRGB and a few other) color profiles built in. The color detail for editing photographs is vastly better than you can get on LCD's.
..unfortunately, I suspect it might finally be starting to die. When I first turn it on, the color brightness and darkens intermittently for a minute or two until it's fully warmed up (it didn't ever use to do that before)
...and they were still for sale, and marked down ridiculously... I could have gotten a spare for under $300 (-including shipping-!!!) ...I figured "well, thats nice! CRT's are so cheap now, cause everone want's LCDs, silly people! Good to know!" Of course, now, that I likely need to get a new one soonish, they're no longer available anywhere at any price.
Also, since it does 120hz, I also can use it for stereo3D (yes, this is a 12-14 yr. old monitor!) at 2048x1536... (which is BLOODY AWESOME for nvidia 3D-vision gaming, especially since I can turn the brightness -way- up to 100 and solve all the issues with shutter-glasses dimness you see with LCDs)
The worst thing, is that when CRT's were on there way out 4-5 years ago, I looked up the price of a new one (I was thinking of getting another one for my girlfriends computer, but she insisted on a 'flat panel')
*cries*
---
the pen is mightier than the sword, the sword is mightier than the court, the court is mightier than the pen.
I'm writing this on my 3 year old laptop w/15 inch 1440x900 screen. When I bought it, I believe the standard screen resolution was 1280x800. For the extra $100 or so, I've been very happy with the extra pixels. Unfortunately, this laptop is falling apart and I've been trying to figure out what to do screen wise on it's replacement.
Thanks to widescreen TV, almost all entry level laptops only come in 1366x768 screens, "HD". I've used other people's laptops, and I'm pretty sure I would miss the vertical pixels. (Why isn't more software optimized for widescreen use yet?)
Without going to a 17 inch laptop, it looks like I'm going to have to pay a huge premium (i.e. at least 50% more) to upgrade to a mid-range laptop from whatever entry level laptop is on sale at a bricks and mortar, or at Dell. Even then, there's not a lot of selection.
Interesting. The Shimian and Catleap have been around for a few months now, at least, at under $350 shipped. Not only are they both 2560x1440 IPS displays, but the Catleap was able to do 120Hz, and a new set of 120Hz capable Catleaps are being produced.
Sucks to be you.
more and more stuff moves to the web/browser model, it can scale nicely, no need to rely on the OS, and how ironic is that, HA!
The browser is better than the OS.
So together with WebGL, and html5, you can achieve the same or better GUI as native apps, and be as fast, and faster than any ugly java gui too, so screw you oracle.
So there, ditch native apps/guis. Code for html5+webgl.
But surely to run old native apps at 2x, like the ipad can run iphone apps, should be easy to do, just scale that window 2x.
Oh and btw, re iPad running iPhone HD apps in SD, comon Apple, how dare you run iPhone Apps that run in full HD res, in 50% sized SD crap res like an 3GS. Run it at 1:1 pixel, if theres a slight border, who gives a rats ass, its better than a tiny iphone app.
Get a clue apple devs, fix it, ya lazy SOBs.
Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
First off, desktop displays are 27" max, and most 24". It's pretty well documented that once you hit 1080p you need a 37"+ display to see the difference (insert 100+ /.ers with 40/40 vision claiming otherwise). Second off, since 90% of games are xbox360 ports what diff does it make (x2)?
:).
That said, ultra high res displays do have one good use for gaming. Phony vector games (think ports of Asteroids) look awesome
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
Lots of apps don't work too good when you scale up the font size. Text overflows various graphical borders, windows, the edges of the screen, so you're forced to use a font which is too tiny to read at ultra-high resolutions.
Gee, just plug in the X Y sizes in the codec. Is it so hard to make the spec?
4x data, just compress it a little more aggressively, because those 8x8 pixel blocks will be sooooo zoooomed in, you can compress them quite highly.
Or will they encode data as 4 normal HD streams then recombine in memory so that the same data stream can be played on normal cheap blurays too.
Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
Looking around my office most people sit about 20" from their monitor but hold a smartphone 12" away from their face. With 20:20 vision are humans able to see 326ppi at 20"? I would guess not.
I stopped thinking I was unique when I found out everyone else was to. So does that make me the average user???
And I wouldn't classify a 23" 1080p monitor as having 72dpi. My particular monitor is 51 cm across yielding ~95dpi. Most desktop monitors today are in the 100dpi realm (+/-10 dpi; anyone who would buy a 27" 1080p monitor to use at normal desktop monitor distances probably isn't very picky about jaggies, for sure, but at greater than 90-100 cm viewing distances they can be quite nice). At 100 dpi, English characters are legible and not jaggy at the specs I previously mentioned (super- and subscripts of 12-14 point fonts aren't typically 12-14 point fonts so they don't count, though the anti-aliasing grey edges are plainly there for many people on 12-14 point fonts for black on white text, I suspect).
Would more be better? Yes, but not so much for English characters. All the people who use ideographs or more curvy character sets would appreciate it a lot, though, not to mention all the non-character based usages.
Resolution is only one dimension.
Where are the full 12 bits per R,G,B dynamic range screens? or full 16x16x16 color range?
Even your normal 8x8x8 bit LCDs are fake, and usual 6bit, that flicker fast between patterns to achieve the fake 8bit range.
http://compreviews.about.com/od/multimedia/a/LCDColor.htm
Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
I've been wondering for a while (basically every time I look at my HTC android phone) why my top of the line Asus monitor is not as good as my phone, and it cost way, way more.
The bottom line is that at the distances people view their desktop monitors, they don't want the buttons, graphics, and text to be any smaller than they appear with about 80-100 ppi screens. Give all but the most recent applications and operating systems a 130 PPI screen, and there will be UI items that don't scale. Some UI items, like text, will, leaving the interface feeling out of proportion. Higher PPI screens are available on laptops because 1.) Some people demand the implied screen real estate and 2.) Laptop screens are generally closer to your face. I won't discount the whole 1080p standard putting a natural cap on many screens these days (though my 24" BenQ is one of a dwindling set of 1920x1200 panels).
This is why when Apple put high PPI screens in the iphone and ipad, it doubled the PPI. Existing apps would look the same*. Apps can trivially use perhaps the single greatest feature of high PPI: more crisp text with less dependence on antialiasing to mimic round corners.
And it's why, I suspect, if Apple does release Macbooks this year with "retina" displays, they will be double the PPI. While Mac OS X in theory supports a reasonably scalable UI, applications may not. And web browsers will want to operate as if they're rendering in the lower PPI, though rendering text and non-bitmapped elements at the higher resolution. Eventually (maybe next year), we'll see expensive Apple Cinema displays doing the same thing. And there will be the normal competitors (especially Dell).
But until recently, a 150 or 200 DPI LCD was crazy expensive to produce. Judging from the ipad 3, it also takes significantly more backlight capacity (provided by very bright LEDs in that case). We're just now entering a stage in which there are rumors about the 11" and 13" Macbook line getting them, maybe the 15". It will be a while before the 27" and 30" panels can be produced at a price people are willing to pay. That said, I'm holding off buying any more monitors or replacing my T series Thinkpad until they're available. I'm hoping I don't have to wait past 2013.
* Or at least ought to. Some apps on a third gen ipad will actually look fuzzier than it should.
"The universe seems neither benign nor hostile, merely indifferent." --Carl Sagan
Blinks. Looks at 3 30" monitors. Takes out a measuring tape and checks. Yup, all 30"
Watchooalkinabout Willis ?
I still use multiple virtual desktops. There's ne'er any shortage of things to take up screen real-estate, I mean Xcode can easily take all 3 screens, Eagle too (1 for schematic, 1 for layout, 1 for libraries etc), actually pretty much anything I do... A better question is "who needs a computer (raher than a ipad, say) and *couldn't* use multiple 30" monitors ?"
simon
Physicists get Hadrons!
Not me. I'd rather have current resolution and anti-aliasing than a slightly higher resolution.
Hm. At 1080p resolution I do not find any need for anti-aliasing whatsoever, plus thanks to higher display resolution UI-elements, text and textures themselves are much sharper than on a low-res display with anti-aliasing.
Dude , or MOFO as your real name.
I want more res, so I can show more lines of code on screen without using a 6point font.
Another option is to use 2x displays at right angles to give an insane 2160 x 1920.
Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
Which is why every time I migrate from my 2560x1600 home desktop to my 1920x1080 work desktop I get mildly claustrophobic, and I'm practically unable to do anything on my shitty netbook's 1024x600 because there's no space to put anything, because they're all just as good.
Some of us actually need space to have multiple applications open because we actually use them to create things. I find it very useful than I can have 2-4 files open for editing on my desktop, along with a web browser and a terminal to test things in without having to constantly flip from one to the other.
You would need a whole lot more processing power to render those pixels in the first place. AA methods use significant "cheating" to speed up the process, while rendering a high resolution scene means that you actually have to render that high resolution. There's a reason why most modern graphics cards and game don't even bother offering full multi sampling anti aliasing, which is what rendering a high resolution from get go is.
Indeed. 1080p is kind of a downgrade for those of us who had higher resolution monitors from yesteryear.
I am John Hurt.
Probably, but I'd appreciate at least 200. Meanwhile, what we typically get is about 100.
I'm just waiting for someone to invent a borderless display panel, so that many small ones can be tiled to whatever size is needed.
and dreading it.
I use 20 virtual workspaces on my 12" 1280x800 screen for that; pressing a simple key combination, and assuming your WM doesn't do useless animations, is as fast as looking to the other side of a big monitor.
That said, I still find the two big displays I have at work useful for some tasks, but I also spend to much time dealing with window focus issues.
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And if you threw a party
Invited everyone you ever knew
You would see the biggest gift would be from me
And the card attached would say, thank you for being a friend.
WTF? I did throw a party and you didn't get me anything.
Bureaucracy and penny-pinching can often override logical technical decisions that would actually result in a good product that people are willing to buy.
I have a 17" laptop with a tiny, cramped, unusable keyboard on it that was clearly designed for a much smaller laptop. There's something like 6 cm of unused area on either side of the keyboard, but every key is mashed up against every other key to save millimeters of space that don't need saving.
If any employees of Dell, HP, or Asus are reading this, print this out, walk up to your boss, and show him: You've saved maybe 50 cents per laptop by re-using the same keyboard part across every model, but I am willing to pay a $500 price premium to any company that is willing to sell me a laptop that has a standard sized keyboard. I type 50 pages of text or code per week. IT IS WORTH IT TO ME.
To my knowledge, no such thing exists. Nobody is willing to take my money. Maybe I'm a unique and special flower, and too small a market to bother with, but I suspect that maybe, just maybe, there might be a few people out there who, you know... type things... with their laptop keyboards.
Once some dumbass starts the race to the bottom, and every company in a market is doing the same thing, it can be hard to break of the endless cycle of shaving features or quality to under-bid the other guy. It takes vision to come up with a "revolutionary" product -- which is often blindingly obvious -- to shift the market. An example is Apple: they demonstrated that mobile phones don't need to shave cents off by using teeny-tiny screens. Customers are perfectly willing to pay $1000 for a phone that isn't made to the lowest possible spec, and they're now giving that money to Apple instead of Nokia. Remember Nokia? They're the company that used to be the biggest phone manufacturer in the world.
PC Monitors are in the same boat. When Windows 7 was announced, I got all excited about "deep colour", improved high DPI support, etc... I looked into monitors and whatnot too see if I could get a significant upgrade. Turns out that there are something like 4 or 5 models total that support 30-bit colour, none that support 36-bit, and most only at 1920x1080 or below. You can have high-resolution and deep colour, but not in combination with 120Hz or 3D. Don't even bother looking, because Displayport cables can't transmit that much data, and the only HDMI displays that go that high are all TVs.
There are billions more people who want cheap HDTVs than want hi-res monitors, and since TVs are just computer monitors with built in receivers these days... we're screwed by 1080p being all you need for even the largest TV. Bring on the 4K!
Probably not, but far more than today. 20" away with 20/20 vision you can resolve FullHD on a 13" monitor. That is to say 4K on a 26" monitor, less if you got better than 20/20 - that's just the cutoff for normal vision. Okay you can argue if we'd see the full benefits or not but at monitor distance most people should be able to see more than FullHD, if it ever makes sense moving to 8K is a bit more dubious.
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
It's my hope that one small side-effect of the tablet market taking off like gangbusters, is that the manufacturers of laptops will be able to focus on the reasons why people buy a laptop over a tablet or powerful mobile phone (or in conjunction with same). And that is, to type and computer on it.
Laptops have traditionally - at least for the last several years - been designed around media consumption and occasional creation at the high end, and basic web browsing on the lower end. But the market should be changing, and perhaps Apple's upcoming refreshes will force other manufacturers to adapt to the new world of multiple portable options and what the strengths and weaknesses are on each.
My own pointless vanity vintage computing page
The rest of the industry seems completely devoid of imagination. They'll just stick the latest from nVidia, AMD, and Intel into the same old pathetic badly designed and built laptop and desktop designs and race to the bottom to see who can sell the latest i9 ten core the cheapest, or try to ape whatever Apple came up with. Even the 2560x1440 27" monitors really only became cheaper after the 27" iMac came out. Plus, Windows isn't really set up to work well with very high resolution displays, and Windows 8 doesn't seem to be built for anyone who doesn't think that tablets are so awesome we can throw away our multi screen workstations.
Once Apple puts 200+ ppi displays into their laptops and desktop models, the industry will race to copy them. Until then, we're stuck with lovely 1366x768 displays, or 1920x1080 'Full HD' if you really search hard and limit your other options. But hey, you get the latest quad core Ivy Bridge on it! Who cares that yiu can see big square pixels and blocky text.
It had a flickery refresh rate of 43Hz, low contrast, low brightness, crap colour spectrum and lousy off-axis viewing as the cost for the number of pixels displayed on the 22" screen. The high cost and weird hardware requirements (if you ever buy a second-hand T221 make sure the cables come with it or you are SOL) killed it in the consumer market, restricting its use to scientific and engineering areas and some odd niches like day trading setups.
I too look for laptops with large keyboards on them. I tend to buy massively heavy desktop replacement laptops with a 45 minute battery life, so maybe my experience is different from yours, but I can find laptops with reasonably decent keyboards.
I'm not quite as fast on them as I am on my desktop, but I'm approximately 5x faster typing on my laptop than I am on my tablet's touchscreen, and about 2x as fast as when I use my tablet's docking keyboard (which is also too small).
As far as displays go, why are you adverse to buying TVs? TVs are much cheaper than comparable computer monitors, and if you do your research. For example, a 32" monitor will run you between $700-$900, but you can get a very nice LED TV you can use as a monitor for half that.
When you say "keyboard in the middle of the screen" are you specifically not wanting a numeric keypad of any type? This part can be a bit tricky, as manufacturers are typically more interested in having a "complete" keyboard on larger machines since they're able to tack on an additional bullet point for those users that will only buy a machine that has dedicated numeric keys.
I will agree in reference to the media keys that come on so many machines - the lack of such keys was actually a bit of a plus when it came to choosing my Sager NP8130 (Clevo P151HMx). The Sager keyboards tend to be fairly tightly placed, and without the plethora of frills you'll find with more mainstream brands.
My own pointless vanity vintage computing page
Haven't we had this discussion before? Anyway, a desktop (e.g. 24") screen with 100 DPI can display 8pt text which is readable, but a little pixelated. This is also at the limit at how small text one can comfortably read. So a screen with greater than 100 DPI might be a win for 8pt text, but you can't cram in much more information before it's too small to read. It will be nicer to use, but may not increase productivity that much.
I started wondering when I got my Nokia 770 in 2006 with its 225dpi screen. A few months later, I used a 23" IBM monitor with the same resolution... which cost $10K. And then the reason became quite obvious. Modern displays are solid state parts. Just like ICs, they have a defect rate per area, which translates to dead or stuck pixels. As the feature size increases, the chance of defects increases. The bigger the display, the more chance that a defect will result in some dead or stuck pixels. If you make a single 27" panel, one defect will make it unsellable. If you make the same area of TFT but make it into smaller panels, then a defect will just make one unsellable[1].
There's also the secondary issue that unless you scale the DPI by a factor of 2 users are likely to see aliasing effects in bitmap rendering, and so perceive the display as being worse, which is why we don't see many intermediate sizes.
[1] Or, at least, harder to sell. There are lots of applications, such as control panels for industrial equipment, where a dead pixel or two is unimportant, and companies making these are quite happy to pay a bit less for slightly lower quality small panels. Selling defective 27" displays is much harder.
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This is awesome, I had no idea monitors like this existed for this price. I found Shimian for sale on ebay but I can't find Catleap on Google except for some kind of owners club. Could I please have a link to where I can buy these monitors, or are they just on ebay?
-Glitch "We all know Linux is great...it does infinite loops in 5 seconds." - Linus Torvalds
Now I'm thinking about ordering one of those Korean ones to have a massive dual setup... At 310 dollars, it's a goddamn steal.
I don't understand how they can afford to not charge for international shipping too. It can't be cheap to Fedex a 27" monitor from Korea to Germany.
I just don't know how I would arrange the monitors... one on top of the other? They're kind of wide to be using side by side.
-- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
This might be because the fonts get fatter when using a lower resolution, improving readability. If you instead increase the font size, in many cases the font weight does not increase much at all.
Can you see the pixels on your 1080p screen?
I use a 1080p 23" display on a regular basis (from about 1.5' away). I have font-aliasing disable when browsing and can most DEFINITELY see the individual pixels. In fact, periods are exactly 1x1 pixel and they are VERY easy to see. If you can't a 1x1 pixel dot on a 1080p screen then you need to get your glasses prescription updated!
About 10 years ago, you used to get a small range of high-end monitors, and they cost around $1000. That really hasn't changed much. Back then, consumer and TV displays just weren't usable for a lot of computer desktop use. What has changed is that there is a glut of HD displays because of their use in consumer electronics. That has caused computer monitors that happen to have the same specs as consumer displays to fall in price dramatically. But the high end $1000 displays are still there if you want them, and there really are almost as many devices at the high end of the market as there used to be (meaning, maybe a handful). It's just that your expectations have changed and you don't consider them a good deal anymore because HD displays for less than $200 are actually quite good. There's also diminishing returns: a 30" 2560x1440 monitor just isn't a lot better than one (or two!) 1920x1080 monitors, whereas a 1920x1080 is a lot better than a 1280x800 monitor.
Don't want to be a dick, but my Macbook Pro 17" has the same key spacing as my Apple Keyboard.
Like this one, with the speakers on either side of a tiny, cramped keyboard?
Or did your mean the new new 2012 models, which clearly have exactly the same keyboard for both the larger and smaller models?
Or maybe your point is that that Apple has made their normal keyboards cramped too?
Compare those to real keyboard, made for people who use them for typing: It has a gap between the numbers and function keys, the ESC button is separate, the function keys are grouped in sets of four, the arrow keys have a space around them in all directions and are normal sized, and there are dedicated keys for insert, delete, home, end, pg-up, and pg-dn, in the standard position, with a space around them.
By the way, I just compared the width of my laptop to my normal, standard-sized desktop PC keyboard. Ignoring the numeric keypad, which I never use, the laptop is 4 cm wider than the desktop keyboard. There is absolutely no reason why it couldn't have been made to have the exact same layout!
The doubly stupid part of this whole thing is that laptop keyboards are replaceable. They're manufactured as this little metal tray thing that can be separated easily from the rest of the laptop. Why don't manufacturers make half a dozen different layouts, and let people chose? Some people may want a numeric keypad, some may want dedicated ins/del/etc... keys instead, some people may want media-control keys, others might prefer properly spaced function keys, etc...
I may be wrong, but I suspect there's something in place preventing these from being imported to the US/European markets for resale. Dell may have some sort of deal with the panel manufacturer or something.
There has to be something like that, since the price (shipping included) is ~$300... meaning you could probably import them to the US in bulk for under $250. They would sell like hotcakes at $350, especially since they're the same panel as the Dell U2711, but with an LED backlight instead of the power hungry tube used in the Dell. It's basically the Apple Cinema Display at a third of the price.
-- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
You got the dick option? I could only afford a dongle though later I bought a USB extender for it but it didn't do anything. That sounds like serious surgery on the T60, and in the end you'll have a machine with a monster LCD(ick) but with a weakling physique behind it. I'm not sure that will impress the ladies though you can never tell with them. This panel I got was a drop-in replacement for the original WSXGA+ panel that I wrecked. No, when this dies I'll probably replace it with one of the the 32-core, 64G machines they're pushing then, or whatever's at the sweet spot of the price/perf curve, and put up with the shitty 1920x1080 display or whatever fucked-up resolution the The Market dictates at the time.
The man who dies rich dies disgraced. -- Andrew Carnegie
If any employees of Dell, HP, or Asus are reading this
What about Lenovo? The keyboards in ThinkPad laptops (not the cheapest ones that I'm told are rebadged IdeaPad) are so renowned for quality that Lenovo has started making a version for desktop PCs.
Shimian panels are rejects from Apple, meaning that they often have problems.
It's buyer beware and the fact that you have to get it shipped from Korea means that you're probably not going to be able to return it. That said, they're cheap and often good so, you know, there you are.
Indeed. Why would you need eBay, unless you want do something as questionable as paying $100 less, including shipping? Don't do it! Your friends will make fun of you for not having the proper branding on your purchase.
Although Catleap et. al. shows that there is a market for defective displays.
(That's how they get their panels so cheap, FWIW.)
I had a 1600x1200 CRT for ages, but a couple years back I finally replaced it because I got tired of messing with a DVI to VGA adapter to keep using it and got a 1920x1080 LCD instead. It is arguably of roughly equal capability, though wider and not as tall. It doesn't weigh 60 lbs though, which is nice when I've had to move it...
we are all invisible unless we choose otherwise
I think the answer to this, why that doesn't exist, is a misunderstanding.
The free-market isn't a magic factory that produces stuff tailored to your specific desires. It responds to aggregate demand. If this item isn't made then either 1) no corporation perceives demand, or 2) no corporation thinks they can make it AND sell it for more profit than some other product that is already out there.
I think #2 applies here. The people willing to buy a nicer laptop (screen, keyboard) at a higher price aren't a large enough market for a corporation to really care about. From their eyes, the delta in customers they would gain buying the fancier laptop, isn't worth it.
I have a Toshiba 755D laptop bought as a desktop replacement last April (OK you can stop laughing now). The keyboard is just fine for my pianist hands, didn't even have to adjust. I also have an Asus 1008HA netbook. The keyboard on that is half the size, yet I can still type just as fast on that as on the Toshiba. That said, I do still revert to my classic (I mean, PS/2 connector!) Microsoft Natural keyboard for really long projects simply because that is *the* most comfortable keyboard I have ever used. Bar NONE.
As to the original topic, it pisses me off that a technology that went mainstream for computers first (lcd screens) has been coopted for television sets, and now we have people ON SLASHDOT saying "if you want better resolution get a TV."! Fuck you! I DO NOT WANT A TV, I WANT A COMPUTER MONITOR WITHOUT THE BAGGAGE OF A UK TV LICENCE.
Operation Guillotine is in effect.
Most moder proofers are 600 or 700 dpi. Most modern presses are 1200 dpi or more.
A printer is someone with ink stains on their sleeve and who wears a funny paper hat.
The title of the post is about pixel resolution, asking where all the high resolution displays are.
Resolution and pixel density are two different things.
Distance plays a role too. A 9" display at less than a foot from your eyes will be different from a 30" display sitting two feet away. You don't need the same density at longer distances.
Here the TV chart, they don't have detail at the low end. http://hd.engadget.com/2006/12/09/1080p-charted-viewing-distance-to-screen-size/
Where are the 2k and 4k displays? Maybe they are waiting for that resolution since you can just double or quadruple things?
I don't need the PPI of an iPad on my desktop. But I do want the most pixels I can get. An 8Kx4.5K monitor doesn't have to be 24x13". In fact I'd prefer it be 48x26" - a real desktop. For 25 years I've had to work on a virtual desktop that's the size of an old legal pad or smaller. I want my whole desktop back. I want two of them: one horizontal desktop, another the wall behind it.
The higher PPI costs the real money for mobile devices with "entertainment quality" resolution, just as shrinking any process size costs money. Large area displays also cost money, since manufacturing defects are typically n per square inch, which means discarding lots of panels.
I don't know why we don't already get large displays made from panels of smaller displays. When we do, they have a frame that makes assembling multipanels have an annoying "tictactoe" grid. Instead, the front panel plastic should flare to the sides as it rises towards the viewer, a 45deg angle from the pixel plane to the frontmost surface. That would make a lens that enlarges the image slightly, getting it over and past the edges. Laminate a film across the several panels, and clip the panels together with a grid hidden inside the outwards flaring bezels.
Give me a desktop that's 4x4 HD panels each at 160PPI and another backstop against the wall. That should cost me something like $2500. That would be a lot cooler than an iPad.
--
make install -not war
I assume you don't want a macbook pro? Their 17" has a centered keyboard.
While a first post off topic troll. I will relate it with the topic at hand.
The key reason why we don't have high resolution PC displays, is partially because the current Operating Systems, are not configured to use them.
Sure they may be able to support the resolution, however your start bar will be very tiny and unreadable, on windows, in Linux Unity will be this very thin little strip with some static in the corner, OS X will have a tiny doc. The apps will be too small to read, especially for older viewers who still keep their 20" screens at 800x600 display.
I have an RDP app for my iPhone, I configured the setting to connect to a windows server at the phone native resolution. The start bar wasn't that much bigger then 1 or 2 pixel high on at 300x200 display, on a 17" monitor.
Now many of the next generation Desktop Operating Systems, are trying to move away from the 72ppi idea, and make their systems more resolution independent. But they are not quite out there yet. Once the OS's start supporting these screens and displaying apps that are viewable, then the hardware makers will put more effort into making systems with such displays.
If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
I use one workstation for nothing but its display. No real CPU strain beyond viewing static office docs, non-animation/video webpages, OWA. I want a notebook for aal-in-one relocatability (not frequent mobility), builtin UPS, energy efficiency.
I want a WUXGA (or higher) notebook, but I wind up paying for fast GPUs, fast CPUs that are wasted. I'd rather spend on RAM and SSD.
Where can I find a big, slow notebook like that for under $1000?
--
make install -not war
If there's money to be made then someone will grab it.
If someone is not grabbing it, that means that there are barriers in the market preventing someone from doing so. Someone wants to sell you that product.
The free market is merely a reflection of liberty as it relates to human greed.
A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
500$ isn't worth it to your OEM, since nobody else has the life crippling handicap of the inability to move a USB connector a few inches to plug in a full keyboard into the side of their laptop or dock.
while(1) attack(People.Sandy);
Like most monitors, this one is used to watch boobies.
How the hell do you type on a laptop standing on its side?
apple has a 17 inch laptop.
I think it's a combination of momentum, apathy, and ignorance.
It's definitely worth it, because I can't be the only human being on earth who wants to use one of the only two input devices on a laptop for its intended purpose! If I'm willing to pay more for a decent keyboard, so are other people.
The problem is more likely that until relatively recently (compared to PCs), all laptops were 15" or smaller. Monitors still had a 4:3 aspect ratio, so there just wasn't enough space for a full-width keyboard in any laptop model. Hence, compromises had to be made.
Since then, wide-screen 17" laptops have become commonplace, but nobody has realized that with the keyboard width constraint gone, there's no reason to persist with the design optimized for smaller devices. It just hasn't "clicked" with anybody that this is an important compromise to undo.
I guarantee you that the first decent 17" laptop with a proper keyboard will cost on the order of $1 more to make, and it will be a best-seller for the corporation with the "vision" to make it.
because people sit a hell of a lot closer to a monitor than they do a TV and above 24 inches, 1080p resolutions look awful when sitting that close.
even with zero barriers, if there are only a small number of people compared to the market that might consider buying the device, they will not produce it because of the costs to produce, advertise and sell the product to such a small number of people eat up the profits.
Guess again. Printers use 1200dpi for a reason. While you can't spot the individual pixel at 600dpi we can easily tell 1200dpi looks better, and 300dpi print is so low res any human with normal vision can tell it is crappy printing from several meters away.
Can you explain this a little more please? It sounds like you're saying that patents completely stifle innovation while they are in force - but that would mean claiming that there are popular and in-demand technologies that have stood still for 20 years. I'm sure that's not what you mean but it would be helpful if you could be a little more explicit.
You also address the dissuasive impact of potential legal costs on new entrants into a market. What you don't mention though is the inducement provided by patents allowing an inventor to make a profit from his invention without having to compete with 'copycats' that don't have to recoup their R&D expenditure. To take an example from the technology sector, Intel have spent $32.2 billion on R&D in the last 5 years. One wonders how much they would have been willing to spend if they had known that AMD or IBM could copy their innovations.
I'm still perfectly happy with my massive 2048x1536 Trinitron. My desk may be sagging in the middle, but it only cost £2 and has twice the resolution of the TFT next to it.
It is less a case of 'lost' and more 'never had'. Screens are larger and higher resolution (for the price) then they have ever been. But bringing up the second screen is probably part of why these large high resolution screens are not catching on. Much cheaper just to get two regular screens and get a total area larger then the high resolution one. If you want more screen for your buck, high resolution just doens't cut it.
You're lucky - I got Gamemaker.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
Ahm.. we have 'content', it is called an operating system. Monitors are used for more then just media consumption and playing games.
Want a killer app that can really use the extra space? Photoshop.
I just took a tape measure to my full size desktop keyboard and my apple keyboard. The spacing between the letter keys is larger on the apple keyboard. You are a stupid dick whining on the Internet from a position of complete ignorance.
For actual touch typists, the apple laptop keyboards are the best keyboards available at any price.
Says the guy who never used a Model M.
If you open up the laptop, there probably isn't the space, depth-wise, on the edges to contain a keyboard.
That being said, I agree they could make an effort to give laptops (other than desktop replacement ones) a better keyboard. As another poster pointed out, maybe the switch in consuming content to tablets will allow (force) laptop makers to find a different market, one that caters to people who actually do serious work on their laptops.
-- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
You have described the reason Apple is at the top of the heap and the other cheap garbage companies are left fighting it out for the cheap garbage consumers. Seriously, Apple doesn't worry about $1 x 1 million machines = $1M in additional costs. Apple thinks, "if we spend $1 more on this keyboard, we'll sell 1 million more models".
I wish more marketing and business programs in the US would discuss this.
Of the laptops I've dismantled the keyboard "trough" is at most a few millimetres deep.
What's more the eee 100 I'm typing on has USB, ethernet & VGA ports under the keyboard area & they're all within 1cm of the key tops.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
There is also this if you want to pay more for a scalar and for the right of return
You can buy for $400 a 2560 x 1440 monitor on ebay.
That's with zero defect and hardened glass.
Problem?
You need a new computer to drive it.
GX670 or GX680 minimum.
Right now those set you back about $500.
Plus probably a new computer to drive those.
I'll have 2560 x 1440 in about 6 weeks. The monitor is here now.
As is the 120gb sata 3 solid state drive.
She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
The spacing on the Apple keyboard is the same between all the keys.
Take your hand off your keyboard, close your eyes, and then quickly press the F7 key.
You can't, can you?
I can on mine, because it's in an easy to find position. There's an extra large gap between F8 and F9, which is easy to find by touch, and then I move just one key to the left, and tada... F7 is right there!
Some of use all the keys on the keyboard, not just A-Z, which is apparently all that is required to write snarky comments as an anonymous coward.
I'm not sure what you're talking about. I have a 15" MBP and I just measured the distance between the F and the G keys, comparing them against the full keyboard I used. They're the same. Yes, the function keys and the arrow keys are squished, but I honestly didn't notice or care until you mentioned it. But for conventional typing of documents, there's no difference.
That being said, I agree that it's silly to squish keys that don't need to be squished when there's ample room available. If a laptop has room for something like a numeric keypad, they should provide one.
Given that the keyboard on MBPs are carved out of the single block of aluminum they use, I can see how it would be cost prohibitive to offer multiple keyboard types without a major retooling of their build process. It's too bad that Apple is in such financial peril. I'm sure if they were better off they would be able to divert some money to expanding the product line with other variations... *cough*
... or there's not, in fact, any money to be made from it.
I had[1] one of these. Beautiful game controller for flying and driving, given the size (meaning when I was on the road I could take it with me). The downside? Fits via a game port. They never brought out a USB equivalent.
I'm not blaming it on some conspiracy theory though. I guess the old one didn't sell so many that they thought it was worth the effort of upgrading it.
[1] Actually, I still have it. What I don't have is a working useful 'puter to plug it into.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
Are you by any chance using a laptop screen? If so the reason 1080p looks fine without anti-aliasing is probably the pixel density. On my 24" display at its native resolution of 1920×1200 (i.e. 1080p with an additional 120 vertical pixels), anti-aliasing is a must on non-2D games. The pixels are about 0.3 mm to a side, or ~95 dpi, which makes them easily visible. On a 17" 1080p laptop screen however, each pixel is about 0.2 mm to a side (~130 dpi) and thus needs less AA to appear equally as "smooth" at the same viewing distance. To get a roughly equivalent pixel density (and thus equivalent "smoothness" and "sharpness") on a 24" 16:10 monitor, a resolution of about WQXGA (2560×1600) is required.
If however you are using a >=24" 1080p display at ~50 cm/1-2 ft then that may be more indicative of your visual acuity than anything else; not everyone's eyes are created equal. An individual with 20/20 vision should be able to distinguish individual pixels when they are above around 0.15 mm/side (~170dpi) at ~50cm, and be able to detect aliasing even beyond that.
With regard to the "sharpness" point, sharpness is determined by how small the smallest details are, so the higher the resolution the sharper an image will be; its that simple. Anti-aliasing has no affect on how sharp and image is, it is designed to make edges smoother (i.e. remove aliasing (jaggies), not add detail).
There already is one.
"Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
You seem to associate the media and users as the same. Should everyone associate the media and America, as well?
Anything Apple related and being commented on by the media should be taken with a grain of salt. They want something that will draw eyes, and it's mostly what they use.
Most Mac users think it's a neat invention, and probably will get it, but are about as abuzz about it as the world was during the move from VGA to SVGA in the industry of the past.
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> As far as displays go, why are you adverse to buying TVs? TVs are much
> cheaper than comparable computer monitors, and if you do your research.
> For example, a 32" monitor will run you between $700-$900, but you can
> get a very nice LED TV you can use as a monitor for half that.
a) Computer monitors tend to be much sharper than TV displays. Fuzzy displays don't work for computing
b) TV sets are still being manufactured with overscan http://hd.engadget.com/2010/05/27/hd-101-overscan-and-why-all-tvs-do-it/ just like they were 50 and 60 years ago... "because we've always done it that way". I have a 50" HDTV that's useless as a computer monitor, because the edges are all cut off, and the menu bar at the bottom is mostly invisible. It's great for feeding NHL Gamecenter Live into the HDMI (Flash inside a resizable Firefox window), but for spreadsheets/email/etc, it sucks.
A slightly fuzzy display is perfectly OK for motion (e.g. TV or streaming internet video), becuase you don't notice it with all the movement. But it bites when you read straight text.
I'm not repeating myself
I'm an X window user; I'm an ex-Windows user
Do you have a link to get one at that price? The ones I've seen are HP branded and cost quite a bit more.
You mean something like this: http://www.cnet.com/laptops/alienware-aurora-m9700/4505-3121_7-31878926.html ?
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
A monitor with ROUNDED sides shows a company NOT interested in designing into it what matters.
now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
You read articles? You must be new here.
I don't think we call them articles anymore, they are slashvertisements. RTFS
If you're sitting back, maybe that's not so bad. I envisage 20000x15000 screens in the future, and if they cover the wall, that could work out at 100dpi, but most people would probably be quite happy with that.
Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
Printers use that high resolution because they are essentially 1-bit-per-color devices (sometimes slightly more). To get grayscale they need dithering, which reduces the effective resolution a lot (64 levels of grayscale need, in the worst case, 8x8 pixels for one logical pixel).
What I mean is the rate of technological progress is constrained by the length of time before a patent expires. Existing technology can't be improved upon and new technology won't have a competitive price (lower prices = greater demand). The only alternatives then is to come up with another method to achieve the same effect (research), wait for the time to run out on the patent, engage in a legal battle which may or may not invalidate the patent, or license the patent. In an ideal capitalist economy, the cost of licensing the patent would be equal to or less than the cost of any of the other options. In practice, this rarely occurs.
The problem is that the duration of the patent is fixed, and since most science and technology is built on previous innovation, the rate of advancement is constrained by the length of the patent. This only becomes a problem when the capacity for advancement for an equal period of time exceeds the period of time the patent exists. In the automotive industry, for example, this is not a big problem. In information technology, it is a massive problem that has gutted the industry for the past decade -- we hit the artificial limit sometime around 2000--2002. Ever since then, progress has become a straight line with advances occuring on a predictable (if slow) time table.
#fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
Most gamers I know are more focused on FPS than resolution. There simply isn't enough oopmh on current display adapters to drive a extra-high res display at >60FPS in bleeding-edge games.
Games can always use a more pixels, as the rendering will scale.
Also, working with multiple documents on a computer is easier with lots of screen area. I'm currently using a 2-screen setup at work (2x1920x1080), and sometimes I could use even more...
C - the footgun of programming languages
Plus even with higher resolution the imagine still won't look as good without AA, so you would have to have both. Without AA you will still have hard edges and the eye is very sensitive to them. In the real world most edges are not razor sharp 90 degree cuts, they are slightly rounded, but no-one bothers to model that with polygons and just relies on AA.
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
Depends why they were rejected. Dead pixels would be annoying, 0.5% inaccurate colour not so much. Might even be just that the brightness doesn't go all the way up to the retina burning level they like to set in shops (Samsung TVs are the worst for that).
More information is required.
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
I'm not worried about power problems....but the nice price is tempting, and will look at them as that I'd like to get two or three of these monitors for a nice set up for editing video....
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
I've so far, only had success with hooking a macbook pro to the Dell u2711....to get full resolution with displayport....so, not sure these monitors would work?
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
Content?
I use my big 59" plasma TV in the living room for playing 'content'.
A computer monitor...well, that's for work....and also for some 'play' like editing and color grading video and high resolution photography.
I have a Canon 5D Mark III camera, which shoots at the very high end of the scale, and I like to have a monitor that is high resolution and well calibrated to see the true colors I'm working with....
I have laptops and tablets around the house for just 'surfing'...and like I said, I have nice tvs and audio systems for media content (movies, etc)...but to me, the computer is my tool, and I like good tools for real work.
I've never understood the people that try to use one computer for everything...watching tv on a small computer screen? Not for me..
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
More information is required.
Well yeah, that's the point - you don't know why your monitor was rejected and you won't until you turn it on.
Here, there's a thread with more information. Looks like you've got a chance of a little over 80% to get a good one:
http://www.overclock.net/t/1215866/reviewed-400-2560x1440-ips-no-ag-90hz-achieva-shimian-qh270-and-catleap-q270
I know many think that an LCD is the Cats meow when it comes to getting work done and they're right. Power Consumption is far better, little/no flicker as the old CRT's did with flourecent lights along with the lower heat output but and it's a damn big BUT the color depth of an LCD is useless to me. Hell I've got a nice 23inch 1080 monitor and the stinking color depth is only 6 bit. Remember that's less then the 8 bit Web safe colors of yesteryear and I've been missing even a decent 16bit depth from a 1280x1024 CRT display because of the lack.
What I want is a decent 1920x1200 CRT that handles a proper 32bit color depth that can be calibrated correctly instead of the shit they're calling High Definition now days. Sorry folks but color depth for Photographers rules, not resolution and I want at least a 16bit depth instead of the so called HD that's only 6bit depth. Worthless Pieces of shit.
Mod me up/Mod me down: I wont frown as I've no crown
Looking around my office most people sit about 20" from their monitor but hold a smartphone 12" away from their face. With 20:20 vision are humans able to see 326ppi at 20"? I would guess not.
Guess again. Printers use 1200dpi for a reason. While you can't spot the individual pixel at 600dpi we can easily tell 1200dpi looks better, and 300dpi print is so low res any human with normal vision can tell it is crappy printing from several meters away.
The problem here is that the "dpi" figures for monitors and displays vs. that given for printers *don't* refer to the same thing and they can't be directly compared. (*)
A pixel can typically have one of a *large* number of shades and brightnesses, whereas an ink dot generated by a printer is a single dot (usually one of four or sometimes six ink colours at most). The latter have to be dithered to generate the illusion of shading, which effectively means lower resolution. (**)
This image is somewhat helpful in illustrating the point.
(I would point to the Wikipedia articles (Dots per inch and Pixel density), but I found them a bit unclear, and in fact one of them has been tagged.)
(*) This isn't really your fault, so much as it's a problem with the generally-accepted (mis?-)usage of "dpi" to describe both "pixels per inch" and "(ink) dots per inch" obscuring that fact.
(**) Of course, it's more complicated than that, as (e.g.) with crisp, high-contrast material like text, there's no shading and the effective resolution will be higher. But for arbitrary photographic material with a range of shades, it won't be.
"Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
Well, I just gave up and got an external keyboard and folding laptop stand. This is not only more ergonomic, it has the advantage of extending the lifetime of my laptops. I write so much the keys fall off. My palms even wear through the finish of the palm rests. Who knew that the plastic under the black Thinkpad finish was blue-green?
Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
You know that anti-aliasing is just the simulation of a higher resolution using subpixels right?
Good anti-aliasing means you render the scene at a higher resolution and then down-scale it to the user resolution. If the user had the original resolution, the anti-aliased version would look worse.
Try this: take a photo that's 1920x1080 and looks really good. Now scale it down with your favourite app and good scaling algorithm to 960x540. Now view it maximized on your 1920x1080 display. That's what your'e missing out on by not having a 3840x2160 resolution screen right now with your current 2x anti-aliasing. (more for 4x, etc.)
- Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
Part of the problem is that Windows has traditionally handled resolution scaling very poorly as well. So long as everyone had 800x600 displays, Windows 95 worked great, Windows XP loved 1024x768 and so on. With everyone on the same resolution, all those software writers who don't understand scalable fonts and layouts have it much easier.
- Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
My old 15" CRT *many moons* ago had nearly 1080p resolutions. A little sad really...
http://reviews.cnet.com/crt-monitors/adi-microscan-4p/4507-3175_7-143958.html for those who don't believe me.
- Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
Agreed; I sit 9 feet from a 103" DLP screen in my livingroom for all my gaming. Its a great resolution to distance ratio, also fills most of the field of vision well.
- Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
There are a few good display calculators online to calculate what you're looking for, like this one:
http://bhtooefr.org/displaycalc.htm
Try it out with resolutions and distances you already know you like to compare.
- Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
I have 20/20 vision and I cannot resolve 1080p on a 15.4" monitor that's 20" away unless I focus like I did when I took my last vision test which is not a comfortable state to be in. In other words, what is your source?
Think globally but act within local variable scope.
@1080p and what screen size? A 22 inch 1080P screen is going to look great. 27" will start to show aliasing, 30" and it get's quite noticeable.
So you buy a small 1080p TV, then.
As I said, if you do some legwork, you can save yourself hundreds of dollars for a TV that can look better than a normal monitor.
You know that anti-aliasing is just the simulation of a higher resolution using subpixels right?
Which is FAR less power intensive than actually rendering at a higher resolution.
That's what your'e missing out on by not having a 3840x2160 resolution screen right now with your current 2x anti-aliasing. (more for 4x, etc.)
You know what else I'm missing out on? Having to have a GTX 580 to get playable framerates. Just wait till the next-gen consoles come out as well, then playing games at 3840x2160 will require a 690.
a ham sandwich can play PC games @ 1440 x 900 @ low settings.
Indeed, what's your point?
my under-$200 GPU plays games @ 2304 x 1440 @ high / max settings + buttloads of AA.
What games? A 6870 won't play Metro 2033 at those setting playably according to Toms.
Asus 24 inch 1080p monitor at Amazon: $189 http://www.amazon.com/Asus-VW246H-24-Inch-Integrated-Speakers/dp/B001LYWBOM
24 inch 1080p TV at Amazon: $189 http://www.amazon.com/Toshiba-24SL410U-24-Inch-1080p-LED-LCD/dp/B004MFBH7O/ref=sr_1_1?s=electronics&ie=UTF8&qid=1339279542&sr=1-1
Unless you are looking for a dual use device, the monitor will end up serving you better in my experience because all the price goes to making it work well as a computer monitor. the TV is meant to work well as a TV.
He's saying a screen at 1920 x 1200 gives you more real estate in the vertical dimension than a 1920 x 1080 screen.
I'm currently running a 24" at 1900x1200 for the transalted sum of ca $400 and have a 24" analog monitor that runs at 1600x1200 and have the possibility to run a much larger resolution. I was dreaming of 2560x1600 - 20 years ago and is still dreaming... (I think I will buy a Dell UltraSharp U3011 soon.)
Mundus Vult Decipi
Nope, that's still crap. Take a look at this photo, which shows the keyboard clearly.
All the keys are jammed up against each other. The space between the number row and the function key row is missing, the arrow keys butt up against three other keys, etc... In other words, it has exactly the issues as every other laptop keyboard.
I've looked: to my knowledge, no laptop manufacturer on Earth has ever made a decent laptop keyboard, despite oodles of room on most 17" models. No such thing exists.
Except that some of us actually use our laptops for their intended purpose, and move them around with us, which makes a dock or other full-size peripherals impractical. Also, even if I had a keyboard, this places the laptop further away from me, making the screen harder to read. Not all of us have 20/20 vision.
Unlike people who buy a laptop to just to leave it sitting there in the same location, I have a desktop PC for that purpose... with a USB keyboard.
You do know that having a TV does not mean you have to pay for a licence, don't you? A licence is required for *the act of receiving live broadcast TV*.
Try Google.
Catleaps are either sold out or, if you can find one right now on eBay, it's not going to be the 120Hz version, yet.
The panel in the Catleap 120Hz is probably actually the same one in the Apple Cinema Display (this is one of the theories, anyway). Considering that the Catleap was selling for $350 incl shipping, you can see the massive markup that Apple adds, as it does with all of its other products. I can't say if they are available in Europe. You can buy these monitors in shops in Korea, though, and now in Micro Centers in USA.
Looking around my office most people sit about 20" from their monitor but hold a smartphone 12" away from their face. With 20:20 vision are humans able to see 326ppi at 20"? I would guess not.
No. The limit of human visual resolution is approximately 1 arc-minute. At a distance of 20", this equates to about 0.006", or approximately 172dpi. Which is still nearlt 50% higher than the 120dpi of the highest resolution monitor I see in a quick web search.
(Note you also cannot resolve 326dpi at 12" - 286dpi is about the highest you can resolve at that distance. You'd have to hold your iPhone 4 at just 10.5" in order to be able to see all of its pixels.)
Just note that they have different video connections, and often only Dual-DVI connections.
ebay.com
>macbook
I've discovered your problem. Just so you know, "it just werks" was a slogan, not reality.
Also, your grammar is horrid.
peace out
Except for the few printers with dot size control, printer pixels are either full on or full off, whereas monitors are 8 bits per pixel. For a printer to get 256 shades of grey, a 16x16 array is required, so the 1200 dpi becomes 75 dpi. (There are some visual system effects that make the reduction not quite so severe, but the principle is correct.) My point is, except for line drawings, printouts and displays are not comparable.
Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
The kde taskbar has configurable size, and icons are available in a variety of sizes (or make your own, it's not that difficult.)
Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
How about this one?
"I'd rather have current resolution and anti-aliasing than a slightly higher resolution."
How about you demand both and stop being a pussy?
Why not? They need to come up with something to get everyone to buy new TVs all over again, and this whole 3D thing isn't working out.
At work I've recently retired my 19 inch CRT screens to move to the same resolution on a 20 inch IPS LCD screen at 1600x1200, which is sadly still considered close to the top end. When I lugged one huge and heavy CRT out of the place I noticed the date on the thing was 1997! Fifteen years old, not even close to the best of it's day and it's still got better screen resolution than a lot of LCDs now.
please understand, that intent is not the burden in civil law: only the ability*. If you HAVE something that is capable of receiving live broadcast video, then according to the Telecommunications Act you require a license - regardless of whether or not you bought a HDMI-ported TV with the intention of plugging in an antenna or you bought it because your graphics card has an HDMI output and the TV is a quarter the price of a professional panel with the same specification. The fact is that it *can* receive a signal and decode it, therefore the finding is that you are liable.
*This is also how they fucked my brother over. He had an air rifle that was 5% over the legal limit for a non-FAC air weapon. He didn't do as I'd advised (to demand a trial by jury in a criminal court), and the single magistrate in civil court not only had the weapon confiscated, but also dismissed his counterclaims against the police because during the dawn raid on his home they had removed several items without warrant, without cataloguing and without cause. Those items (some very rare and priceless paraphernalia) will never be seen again. Back to the real fuck-over: the only burden of proof on the police was that the weapon was overpowered. OK. They went a little further and said that the weapon was able to be turned up even further (not true, the hammer spring was sealed behind a solid rivet hence tampering was impossible without destroying the weapon), but the magistrate took the police at their word. Part of the judgement he said that the weapon was overpowered, had the potential to be powered up even further hence had to be confiscated. In a criminal court the burden would have been on the CPS to prove that the intent in buying a tamperproof weapon was to tamper with it and make it lethal at range. Notwithstanding the fact that it was only lethal if you were a rabbit at 70m or a tin can at 100m.
Operation Guillotine is in effect.
I am willing to pay a $500 price premium to any company that is willing to sell me a laptop that has a standard sized keyboard. I type 50 pages of text or code per week. IT IS WORTH IT TO ME
I bought this Acer Aspire for my wife about three years ago for the exact same reason, although hers has a Core i5 instead of AMD.
http://www.notebookcheck.net/Acer-Aspire-7540G-504G50Mi.47017.0.html
Actually monitors dither too, most LCD-screens only support 6 bit of _one_ color in each dot, and then dither that to simulate 24 bit colors. Most IPS screens support 8 bit of color in each dot, but many of them dither that to pretend to support 10bit per color.
Not to be dick, but: why would I want large gaps between the keys? What functionality does it serve? a .5cm gap between the home key block and anything else, or the function keys and the number keys, should be enough. You don't need an inch or more.
Personally, I prefer the Lenovo UltraNav keyboards (either with or without the numberpad, but without is just fine, thanks). I used to love my IBM Model M, but then realized it was causing undue movement. My wrists were getting fatigued. On the ultranav, this isn't the case: there's much less movement required in both my wrists and my fingers. Carpel tunnel numbness hasn't been a problem for years (and I tried many other keyboards getting here).
Apple, IMO, makes the second best 'independent' keyboard on the market. They're comfortable to type on and have all the physical keys you need (unless you deal with al ot of numbers). The only downside is that you still need to be reliant upon a mouse - one of the biggest causes for repetitive strain injuries.
I couldn't agree more with the 'replacable' keyboard option. The downside and difficulty there, of course, is that people would start to expect them to be compatible between different laptop models and vendors. Since a keyboard nad the screen are the two biggest points of distinction for many people (presumably) on a laptop, I'm guessing that may not fly... better to be unique and shitty. :)
~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
There simply isn't enough oopmh on current display adapters to drive a extra-high res display at >60FPS in bleeding-edge games.
Gamers were happy with 320x200 resolutions back when 800x600 and 1024x768 were considered a regular productivity resolutions. Anyway, current display adapters aren't an issue. The lowend, decade-old equivalent low-end display adapters are, but who in their right mind would play high-res modern games on those?
It's not bad for video. You can go down to 30Hz, 24Hz or 25Hz to match the video frame rate exactly, if you must. Nothing prevents you from attaching lower res, higher refresh displays and TV's for some games and movies, however. I love playing games in high-res, even if they are limited by the display refresh rate. The monitors are also overclockable up to 60Hz refresh rates (I haven't tried it myself yet). The overclockable parts are the huge FPGA chips driving the panel circuits. To give enough bandwidth to drive them at those refresh rates, you need a pair of HDMI 1.3 outputs with HDMI-DVI adapters or a DisplayPort output with a dual DVI adapter.
What happened to the right tool for the job, eh?
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
Laptop displays aren't more expensive than desktop displays. They are the same kind of panels, just in a different package.
HTML5 and Win7 are fixing this....
The problem was early windows -- everything was in pixels.
Well, starting in HTML5, they redefined the pixel to be 1/100". That's right!
In order to correct for a generation (or two) of stupid programmers, (X11 programmers knew about DPI, but starting with windows ... that knowledge was lost). They now pat those programmers on the head and say "there there, it's ok, you go on using your pixels... and everything will be fine...)...
Meanwhile, real pixels can start going up, without print becoming tinier...
Win7 has made a primitive start in allowing this type of magnification -- but only in post-processing -- resulting in a less than ideal result. I.e. it has Winxp compatible resizing which resizes in pre-process, but widgets and graphics may not line up, and has a post-render resize which resizes everything, but only after it has been pixelized...(sigh)...
With the new system, output goes to a virtual display first, that is later rendered at device native resolutions...but the programmers and web designers will only see the software-pixel...
but I am willing to pay a $500 price premium to any company that is willing to sell me a laptop that has a standard sized keyboard. I type 50 pages of text or code per week. IT IS WORTH IT TO ME.
To my knowledge, no such thing exists.
For your consideration:
Dell's Precision line of laptops has some models with comfortable full-size keyboards. I'm typing this on a Dell M6400 which is nice to type on; full-size keys (plus backlit, nice in projector low-light situations), and a 10-key keypad and a real row of FN-keys at the top (although the fn-keys are maybe 70% the size of the other keys).
Relevant to the original topic, the screen is 1900x1200. It is a gorgeous screen for a laptop.
Anyway, having added some SSD's (SATA2) in it, the machine is quite responsive (I have this one maxed out at 16gb ram, but that is comfortable to work with for a while). Downsides = big, heavy, and the power supply is the size + weight of a six pack (ok, maybe half that volume but it is huge). If you want a good keyboard + horse power + really nice display and great storage options (in addition to the two internal sata hdd slots, I added a 750gb drive in a optical-bay caddy since I almost never use DVD's these days) so I'm pretty well set for storage. (As an aside, this machine was built by Foxcon - I've taken it down to the motherboard a few times for various upgrades and replacements and - I have to say - Foxcon did *nice* work).
I'm going to use this another year or so then see if I can find something similar that has can use internal PCIe SSD(s) - I want to bypass sata and go for a PCIe x4 or x8 device (*shrug* I haven't seen that in a laptop yet for storage, but when that comes out it will be time to upgrade).
For a laptop, this one has a pretty sweet keyboard. You can find used ones on ebay at very affordable prices these days, thought I might suggest the M6500 or later because the M6400 doesn't have a function mPCIe slot. Study up on the various screen options, CPU options, GPU options (I've been pleased with the Quadro FX 2700m) so you understand the exact configuration you're getting.
*shrug* I'm just sayin, you can find laptops with nice keyboards if you look around a little.
Close, it has visibly larger gaps where it should, but obviously it's not possible to buy it any more.
It still doesn't have the arrow keys or the ins/del/etc keys in the right locations.
Some posters have complained about cramped laptop keyboards.
My Thinkpads (T23, T30, T60) have 0.75 inch wide/high keys, just like my Model M.
They just don't sound quite as loud or feel quite as sound.
--
It is easier to forgive an enemy than to forgive a friend.
Not only will it drive a 2560x1600 display, but will drive three displays with a combined resolution of 4960x1600. I know because I'm typing on it now - Dell 30" with a portrait 20" 4:3 (1200x1600) on either side. Heck, $150 is what I paid for my 5750 at least 2 years ago, I presume they're less now.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
32" 1080p TV that has PC mode on HDMI: $229. http://www.bestbuy.com/site/Insignia%26%23153%3B+-+32%26%2334%3B+Class+/+LCD+/+1080p+/+60Hz+/+HDTV/4550185.p?id=1218483794718&skuId=4550185&st=insignia%2032%22&cp=1&lp=1
On Newegg, both 32" monitors are $700+, and are lower resolution (1366 x 768).
I might be rather mistaken about this, but I've heard South Korea has some contracts where they are sort of grandfathered in from the time that they were still marked as a development country (1997).
The higher the resolution, the faster the processors required for the graphics card and in the monitor. Ergo, the higher the power consumption for each.
The next point is with respect to Quality Control of the monitor. The likelihood of a defective pixel or color LED is infinitesimal, but still occurs as a random distribution of the screen material (I believe defects follow the Poisson distribution). Therefore, in making very dense high resolution screens, will require many screens to be tested before a good one (low defects) is found.
If you make 10 screens but only 1 is suitable, costs are high, waste is high, and selling price is high. But with lower density screens, the leds are larger, and defect rates much much lower. Ergo, 1080p or 2000p, screens using very slightly larger leds have much lower defect rates.
Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
Panasonic 20" 4K2K demoed at CES.
Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once
Panasonic 20" 4K2K demoed at CES.
Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once
I run 2 of these now discountinued monitors and love them. Still some available on the refurb market. I paid less than $200 each some 3 years ago. These work out to a 98 ppi density, which is damn close the retina definition. They are relative plan monitors that should have been marketed better and they would still be around IMHO. Find it funny that people are complaining about the lack of high resolution displays at reasonable prices, when one existed and flopped because people were afraid to lose a few FPS.
56 lines short vertically isn't much; and given that the screens were all square at the time, its effectively the same resolution if you cut off the inivisible portions of a 1920x1080 display.
1920 is 1.5x wider than 1280, while a 16:9 screen is 1.33 times wider than a 4:3 screen.
The equivalent resolution, had a modern 1080p screen been cut to the same ratio, would be 1440x1080 which is only 18% higher.
- Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
I have dual 24" stacked, found a decent stand, something like this one:
http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/818015-REG/Bentley_D600_Vertical_Dual_Monitor_Stand.html
but mine has a desktop stand instead, it works quite well.
APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
It looks like I have this one:
http://www.buy.com/pr/product.aspx?sku=208042786&sellerid=14369784http://www.buy.com/pr/product.aspx?sku=208042786&sellerid=14369784
but it is up to 24", so might not work for you.
APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
The key reason why we don't have high resolution PC displays, is partially because the current Operating Systems, are not configured to use them.
Are you implying Windows is not a current OS? Windows does support high DPI.
These are NOT hi res displays. I've got a 21 inch monitor that is 1600x1200 next to a 30 inch that does 260x1600. But these aren't high resolutions. Things are a tad smaller, but not retina like. I don't need to squint. I can read slashdot just fine. And youtube isn't one inch, even the small version.
I did, and I used to type so hard I broke it. But I didn't realize they were still being sold.
~S
Hurray for Chic-let keyboards! Those things are truly awful.
Celebrity worship is a poor substitute for Deity worship and costs more to boot.
My Sony Vaio, with a 14 inch screen has a "normal" sized keyboard. It doesn't have a numerical keyboard, or the keys between the numerical keyboard and the alpha keyboard. But if I measure the alpha portion of my desktop keyboard, its 11 inches. My laptop keyboard is 12 inches. The extra inch is for the Home, page up/down keys. The function keys are slightly shorter, but otherwise this keyboard is as good as my desktop one. And this is with my 14inch monitor
Perhaps you need to search harder.
I don't really care what you use.
I believe you can find monitors of those brands with HDMI and other outputs. Just search around eBay.
If my screen cold fold back or rotate around, I would be all for this. Otherwise, no...your laptop ends up being across the table, and most computer desks are too short in these days of flat screens.
My last laptop screen had brackets that fit either way and it lived with the screen backwards just for this reason.
please understand, that intent is not the burden in civil law: only the ability*. If you HAVE something that is capable of receiving live broadcast video, then according to the Telecommunications Act you require a license - regardless of whether or not you bought a HDMI-ported TV with the intention of plugging in an antenna or you bought it because your graphics card has an HDMI output and the TV is a quarter the price of a professional panel with the same specification. The fact is that it *can* receive a signal and decode it, therefore the finding is that you are liable.
(source)
What, do you have football player fingers and hit the enter key and , ; l keys at the same time?
-- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
keyboard size is perfect on the Macbook pro, I'm not sure what you're on about.
It works for me, so it's okay for everyone.
Ohhhh, I'm sorry, that's your thought, not mine.
-- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
I use the f and j key nubs.
It's all you need to figure out where your fingers are.
I also don't touch type F keys, since they aren't in sentences.
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zOMG teH markit anserz
http://www.clickykeyboards.com/
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s/Real/Legacy/;
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and 32 inches the pixels are huge and it looks like ass from 18 inches away.
and the resolution of a 32" COMPUTER monitor is NOT 1366 x 768. those monitors are meant as signage.
Buy a smaller one then. But they don't look bad at all. I use one.