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Linus Torvalds Advocates For 2560x1600 Standard Laptop Displays

beeudoublez points out a Google+ post by Linus Torvalds arguing that today's standard laptop display resolution is unreasonably low. He said, "...with even a $399 tablet doing 2560x1600 pixel displays, can we please just make that the new standard laptop resolution? Even at 11"? Please. Stop with the 'retina' crap, just call it 'reasonable resolution.' The fact that laptops stagnated ten years ago (and even regressed, in many cases) at around half that in both directions is just sad. I still don't want big luggable laptops, but that 1366x768 is so last century."

467 of 661 comments (clear)

  1. 2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    See title

    1. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by maxwell+demon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Actually, 2560x1920 would be better. But apparently more people use their laptops to watch videos than to do work.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    2. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by flimflammer · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's not hipsterish, it's just annoying when you can only read a tiny amount of vertical lines for one file and there's tons of wasted space to the right unless you have two files side by side. Even then most setups I've seen have had multiple displays so the need to shove everything into one screen isn't necessary.

    3. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by tverbeek · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'll let you know next time I want to do a three-way code merge. Don't hold your breath.

      Call me old-fashioned, but I still use a laptop for word processing. I've already moved my task bar/dock (depending on OS) to the left side, and I've been trying to get used to putting my button bars and such over there too, but these cinemascope-shaped displays still leave big white margins on either side, and just a couple paragraphs of text letterboxed in the middle. Web browsing produces the same wasted space on most sites. And don't get me started about trying to use a tablet for drawing... it's like working on miniature legal-format paper. This has nothing to do with being "hipsterish" (I'm old enough that I can't even do hipster fashion ironically), but simple practicality for lots of standard computer uses. I just thank the legacy of Jobs that at least the iPad is still 4:3.

      I'd be quite happy with 1920x1440 in a small laptop, or 2560x2048 on a larger one, instead of this silly 1440x900.

      --
      http://alternatives.rzero.com/
    4. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by dingen · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yeah, just use your laptop sideways. Kids these days, you have to tell them everything.

      --
      Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
    5. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by pmontra · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They are not widescreen, they are reduced height. When you look at them in this way you understand the complaints.

    6. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by dingen · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Linus is talking about laptops. You know, the topic of this discussion.

      --
      Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
    7. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by dwywit · · Score: 2

      Do you do anything other than watch movies or play games?
      A 4:3 monitor gives a height/width ratio of ~1.3:1
      A 16:9 ratio is ~1.7:1
      A sheet of A4 paper has a ratio of ~1.4:1.
      The 4:3 monitor - used in portrait mode - shows a clean, full-sized sheet of A4 - just nice for DTP, layout, etc. Some of us still do work that results in A4-sized hard copy. Works for A3, A5, and A6, too.

      --
      They sentenced me to twenty years of boredom
    8. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by synaptik · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Or, you could stop limiting yourself to 80 columns for your code...

      --
      HSJ$$*&#^!#+++ATH0
      NO CARRIER
    9. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by TheGoodNamesWereGone · · Score: 2, Insightful

      constant hipsterish complaint about widescreen monitors

      I've been on calls where the client's machine is a typical widescreen laptop with 768 vertical resolution, who had two and even three browser toolbars (I'm looking at YOU, Oracle/Java and YOU, Yahoo) that'd been 'helpfully' installed, leaving almost no space at all for actual content.

      Hipsterish?

      Oh, and it's hard enough finding one with a matte display, rather than the glossy bullshit being foisted off on the consheepmers nowdays. They look great in stores where all lighting is from almost directly overhead. Buyers get it home where lighting might not be optimal and the reflections make it almost unusable.

      It's all because manufacturers can get away with it, so they cut costs. The display that goes into a 20" widescreen monitor is exactly the same as the one that goes into a 20" widescreen TV. The average non-geek consheepmer decided long ago that price was more important to them than features, so all the rest of us get shitty displays.

      Hipsterish?

    10. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by retchdog · · Score: 2

      yeah, and US letter (1.294:1) too. i posted this same complaint here months ago. alas, no one gives a shit.

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    11. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by bobbyjack · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I see what you've done there. You've taken the word "consumer" and inserted the word "sheep", inventing your own brand new word "consheepmer", in order to suggest that most people who buy things make their decisions based on the decisions of others, rather than carrying out their own in-depth research into all the options available. Well done, you should be proud of yourself.

    12. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by BlueBlade · · Score: 3, Informative

      2560x1600 isn't even "movie" widescreen, which is 16:9, it's 16:10. I like 16:10 a lot more than 16:9, and I wish it had become the standard for computer monitor instead of 16:9. So it could be worse...

      --
      Religion is the best example of mass psychosis
    13. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by White+Flame · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Recommending an annoyingly-to-uselessly narrow display is not an improvement over using an annoyingly-to-uselessly short display.

      In even the simplest non-power-user case of playing Facebook games, many of them don't even fit onscreen vertically on a 1366x768 laptop. Just the bog-standard stock layout of Windows taskbar on the bottom of the screen, and default maximised browser layout does not leave enough room for many games' meager display assumption, and sometimes fullscreening the browser (a rarely used hidden feature) doesn't even get it all.

      Plus, laptop displays have been actively shrinking in the vertical dimension. The "standard" laptop res nowadays is a widescreen version of the circa 1990 1024x768, but the prior low/mid-range standard res at least used to be 800 pixels tall, with 1280x800. And yes, those 40 or so rows matter when you're highly constrained in that dimension.

      Of course, the ThinkPad had a 2048x1536 15" option, but that's really not fair as it's a pretty exclusive upgrade. But it shows that the tech for decent-resolution portable displays has been around forever.

    14. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by hjf · · Score: 1

      I want a screen like that, but I don't want a Macbook. What do I do?

    15. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Rosyna · · Score: 1

      I want a screen like that, but I don't want a Macbook. What do I do?

      Stop being a contrarian.

    16. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Nerdfest · · Score: 1

      Wait. Others will follow. I've left feed back at Dell, System 76 an a few others about this for the last couple of years ... I'm probably not the only one.

    17. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by dingen · · Score: 1

      Rotatable monitors on laptops? Seriously?

      --
      Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
    18. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by wed128 · · Score: 2

      You could, but you SHOULDN'T

    19. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > Do you do anything other than watch movies or play games?

      Yes. I have multiple applications and Windows open.

      I have been doing this for as long as the tech allowed.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    20. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by mjwx · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Do you do anything other than watch movies or play games?
      A 4:3 monitor gives a height/width ratio of ~1.3:1
      A 16:9 ratio is ~1.7:1
      A sheet of A4 paper has a ratio of ~1.4:1.
      The 4:3 monitor - used in portrait mode - shows a clean, full-sized sheet of A4 - just nice for DTP, layout, etc. Some of us still do work that results in A4-sized hard copy. Works for A3, A5, and A6, too.

      A 16:10 display is two A4 pages side by side. 2560x1600 is 16:10, not 16:9

      Also for those of us who work on spreadsheets and diagrams, 16:10 allows us to do A4 and A3 diagrams in landscape mode.

      For writing documents, if you want to write one page at a time 16:10 is good as half the page takes up the whole screen, but then again in almost all office packages you have borders of whitespace around the page.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    21. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Eyeball97 · · Score: 2

      Can you smell the irony, of posting this "bring back 4:3" crap on a site whose layout takes full advantage of widescreen.

    22. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by White+Shade · · Score: 1

      That's a legitimate question though. The previous comment was all about free market, and how if he wants to buy it, he can just pay the money.

      But, the problem which Linus is trying to deal with, is that in the free market, the thing that people want practically doesn't exist. The industry could make it happen, but they haven't yet.

      It's not contrarian, it's the heart of the matter.

      --
      ìì!
    23. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Agent+ME · · Score: 1

      Instead the CONSUMER gets to choose

      and Linus is a consumer, and his writing is being read by other consumers too.

    24. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by elashish14 · · Score: 1

      I can tell you're not so much of a glass-half-full kinda guy ;-)

      (or gal)

      --
      I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    25. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by GigaplexNZ · · Score: 1

      I just thank the legacy of Jobs that at least the iPad is still 4:3.

      Careful, it's a WIDESCREEN 4:3 ratio. At least the tech specs for the iPad originally listed it as a widescreen 4:3 on the official Apple website.

    26. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Guy+Harris · · Score: 4, Informative

      Linus is talking about laptops. You know, the topic of this discussion.

      And he's not bitching about screen real estate, he's bitching about pixel density, as per TFGPP:

      And the next technology journalist that asks you whether you want fonts that small, I'll just hunt down and give an atomic wedgie. I want pixels for high-quality fonts, and yes, I want my fonts small, but "high resolution" really doesn't equate "small fonts" like some less-than-gifted tech pundits seem to constantly think.

    27. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by GigaplexNZ · · Score: 1

      Most movies aren't actually 16:9 - HD TV shows typically are though. Some movies (The Dark Knight on Bluray for example) actually change aspect ratios multiple times during the film.

      There's a reason Toshiba released the Satellite U845W with a 21:9 aspect ratio targeting movie enthusiasts (but left out a Bluray drive? I don't get it)

    28. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by GigaplexNZ · · Score: 1

      I'd happily pay 45% more for a higher resolution screen. In fact, I did pay ~$200 extra to upgrade my 15" laptop panel from 1280x800 to 1920x1200 a few years ago. It's getting harder these days to find models that even offer upgrades, although 1920x1080 is common enough to not be a total loss.

    29. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by aaronb1138 · · Score: 1

      Samsung's ultra-thin flexible AMOLED to the rescue. Take a 4:3 screen, pull the tabs out on each side for triple headed laptop goodness....

      It's always funny to listen to Samsung hate (not usually here at /.) when you know they are incubating a great deal of the tech we will see implemented over the next 5-10 years in amazing ways.

    30. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by TheGavster · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Widescreen movies in a theater are actually 2.35:1. A proper DVD conversion will show black bars even on a 16:9 "widescreen" HDTV.

      I second the desire for 16:10 monitors; that little bit of extra vertical space really makes all the difference!

      --
      "Because Science" is one step from "Because old book". Try "Because of my experiment testing my falsifiable assertion".
    31. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by TheGavster · · Score: 1

      My secondary panel is model year 2003 and is 4:3. Really only HDTV uses 16:9; proper built-for-computer monitors are still available 16:10, and movies are shot 2.35:1.

      --
      "Because Science" is one step from "Because old book". Try "Because of my experiment testing my falsifiable assertion".
    32. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by gv250 · · Score: 1

      You mean that A3, A4, A5 and A6 are all the same shape? That's so ...

      ... useful.

      I really do love living in the USofA, but I friggin hate USian measuring systems.

    33. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Ritchie70 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes! This!

      I bought a laptop a couple years ago (2010) and didn't even think to look at screen resolution. It's a fairly high-spec Dell otherwise - i7 (when i7 was brand new), 8G, etc etc, so I assumed it would be comparable to my old one at least, maybe better. Spent $1200.

      It's this shit 1366x768. I've been mad since I got it and realized how low res it is.

      My prior laptop, also a Dell, had a "WUXGA" resolution. 1920 x 1200. I bought it in 2005. Spent $2200.

      I don't have the money to blow on another laptop. I have, however, done some window-shopping, and it's darn frustrating. It's not even a search option on most sites, and there don't seem to be many laptops that have higher than 1366x768 anyhow. It was expensive in 2005, but it was an option at least. You can barely even buy it today, because of the commoditization of these screens.

      So don't say "buy it if you want it" because you almost can't.

      --
      The preferred solution is to not have a problem.
    34. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Glendale2x · · Score: 1

      Things were going well until everything had to become "HDTV" to pander to consumers.

      --
      this is my sig
    35. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by mellon · · Score: 2

      That doesn't really help. It helps with indentation, in that you can keep indenting and having lines of code that are the right width. But it doesn't actually get _more code on the screen_ in a useful way, because once the actual line of text, sans indentation, gets too wide, it's hard to grok it at a glance. What gets more code usefully on the screen is more vertical lines of resolution. However, there's a limit to this—if I turn my 1080p display on its side, I can get a really huge number of lines of code on the screen, but it doesn't actually improve things, because now the amount of screen that's at the ergonomically good position hasn't really changed, but there's a lot of screen above and below that. So I wind up wanting the code I'm actually looking at centered around the ideal height, and don't benefit that much from the extra lines of code.

      The real solution to this is to go back to 80x25 screens, and better short-term memory. You think I'm joking, but I'm not.

    36. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by mellon · · Score: 1

      How about 1440x1920? Wouldn't that be sweet? Maybe with a butterfly keyboard?

    37. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by mellon · · Score: 4, Funny

      Actually, the reason I bought a glossy display instead of matte is that I enjoy chewing cud, and have a fuzzy coat. The guy was just being literal. Deal with it.

      (And may I say that you humans really ought to think about those of us of the cloven-hoofed persuasion when designing keyboards? Do you have any _idea_ how hard it is to type on these things without articulable fingers?)

    38. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by mellon · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Buy a Nexus 10, install Ubuntu on it, and use an external keyboard. Bonus: you can use it in portrait mode for hacking code, and landscape mode for watching movies. Now if only they'd release the Nexus 13...

    39. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by smugfunt · · Score: 1

      A 16:10 display is two A4 pages side by side.

      Actually, no. Two A4 pages sides by side (aka A3) is still root 2 : 1, or roughly 14:10.

    40. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by mellon · · Score: 1

      What kind of feed? If you've been leaving chicken feed, I doubt it'll get much traction. And you say you left it back at Dell, System 76, and so on, but where? Do they even know you left them a bribe? Maybe they just found some chicken feed and went "what? why is there chicken feed all over my desk?"

    41. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by toddestan · · Score: 1

      It's all because manufacturers can get away with it, so they cut costs. The display that goes into a 20" widescreen monitor is exactly the same as the one that goes into a 20" widescreen TV. The average non-geek consheepmer decided long ago that price was more important to them than features, so all the rest of us get shitty displays.

      That's bullshit. The typical 20" wide screen monitor is 1600x900. I've NEVER seen a TV using a 1600x900 panel.

    42. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by dwywit · · Score: 1

      Jackass? Really? It's nice that you can work on two sheets at a time, but I don't - I work on one sheet at a time. Hence, a 4:3 portrait-mode monitor is useful to me. Get it? It's called utility. I also have a 16:9 monitor for when I'm editing video - controls on the 4:3, and actual footage on the 16:9. I have a layout of hardware and software that suits my purposes, I present some detail to support my position, and you call me jackass. 4:3 is aesthetically pleasing in many cases - so much depends on the content you're presenting.
       
      Now go have a cup of tea and a nice lie down before you discredit your position even further.

      --
      They sentenced me to twenty years of boredom
    43. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by dwywit · · Score: 1

      Heh - I find it .......useful........because it's easy to resize a given document fairly quickly. Got a poster in A3 size? Pull it down to A5 flyer size with minimal adjustments, or print out the A3 version on A4 paper at A5 size two-to-a-page. I think it's handy.

      --
      They sentenced me to twenty years of boredom
    44. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      try 78, so you can email it.

      If you're routinely writing ridiculously long lines of code, you should be dragged out back and monkey-stomped until you promise never to do it again. There's VERY little reason for any long line to not be broken up across multiple lines at logical breakpoints. Of course, this is why "larger vertical space" is useful - you see more of the context for the line without having to constantly jigger up and down to see what was happening around the code you're working on.

      Very wide text is fundamentally unreadable - there are numerous readability studies that have concluded the "optimum" line length for readability is around 75 characters. Go too much wider than that, and you make your code MUCH harder to read.

    45. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by FishTankX · · Score: 1

      Yeah. It goes double up. So 2 A4's one ontop of the other is an A3. Two A3's one ontop of the other is A2. 2 A2's one ontop of the other is A1. And 2 A1's, one ontop of the other is A0. So A0 is quite massive. But you can always get the second smaller size by folding in half.

    46. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Jaruzel · · Score: 3, Interesting

      This is why I love my Dell 2408WFP - it's getting on a bit now, and the color management isn't as good as it should be (but I have a Huey for that), but it's 16:10 with a resolution of 1920x1200 - absolutely wonderful. I never maximise anything, and mostly have several cascaded portrait shaped windows displayed across it.

      Back to topic. I think what Linus actually means is that he wants a higher resolution so that there are no jaggies on fonts, and scrollbars and widgets look sharper. The actual perceived font size (in inches etc.) would be the same - so all these comments about tiny fonts, and 8 way code diffs, are completely missing the point.

      Think of it this way, you watch the same movie on a 720p screen, and then on a 1080p screen - do you see more of the movie picture on the latter? No. It's just _sharper_.

      -Jar

      --
      Together, We Can Make Slashdot Better. I Do NOT Mod ACs. - Check Me Out
    47. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I just switched from 1680x1050 native resolution to 1360x768.

      Yes, that's a 16:10 720p equivalent. I don't have to eyestrain to read desktop icon text, for one thing. I don't find it to be a serious loss of screen real estate but the text is much clearer. Then again, I am using a Windows system, it has ClearType.

      The Facebook game design issue is a problem with their games, not the display setting.

    48. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Buy a Thinkpad designed for the medical industry, or change out the screen yourself? Go to the Thinkpad forums, they have links to screens designed to be perfect replacements for stock Thinkpads and since the medical industry uses Thinkpads you can get high res, but don't expect cheap because the economies of scale just ain't there.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    49. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Jaruzel · · Score: 2

      Dark Knight (& Rises) change aspect ratios on blu-ray because the original versions had sections optimised for IMAX format. That said, you still lost vertical image info as full IMAX ratio is 4:3 - I recall seeing The Dark Knight at the London IMAX and the full 4:3 ratio was used, I've not seen Rises yet but it looks like it only shifts between 21:9 and 16:9 as newer IMAXs don't go 4:3.

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      Together, We Can Make Slashdot Better. I Do NOT Mod ACs. - Check Me Out
    50. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Jaruzel · · Score: 1

      Real Life LOL right here. AND you made me spew my tea you bastard. ;)

      --
      Together, We Can Make Slashdot Better. I Do NOT Mod ACs. - Check Me Out
    51. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Replace the screen yourself, or pay your local PC shop to do it, its not cheap but CAN be done. next time look for Thinkpads made for the medical industry, those are naturally more high res but again you want it you gotta pay for it, the 1366x768 screens are a commodity and have near 100% yields and the price reflects that, the higher res screens have worse yields and thus harder to get.

      And let this be a lesson to you, do your damned homework before you buy! Who buys a $1000 laptop without even knowing the specs? I not only knew the specs on my $350 netbook but I had also saved pages that showed me how to change the HDD to SSD and where to get a touchscreen display if I wanted to switch. What you'll want to look for is "desktop replacement like this quad core AMD but if you want higher than 1600x900 you are gonna have to go for the "gamer" units and be ready to put a serious dent in your wallet.

      Look, my advice? Use the laptop ONLY when you need to be mobile, buy it cheap, and spend the money on a decent quality desktop with a nice high res screen. hell buy a decent GPU like an HD6850 and you can go triple screen and have an eyegasm of screen goodness. laptops are meant for MOBILE and thus will ALWAYS be worse than a desktop, worse resolution, slower CPU, slower GPU, its all given up for more battery life. So unless you are living in hotel rooms frankly the mobile should be a cheap portable while the desktop at home is where you have your screen goodness.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    52. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by smash · · Score: 1

      It is 2x A4 pages - plus a dock on the side.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    53. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by VortexCortex · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The real solution to this is to go back to 80x25 screens, and better short-term memory. You think I'm joking, but I'm not.

      I've been developing my own OS from scratch and right now I'm limiting myself to the 80x25 or 80x50ish modes for the primordial in-OS development environment. I agree that 25 lines is about all I need to see at a time. I could do with a bit more horizontal area, but horizontal scrolling makes up for the lack of columns nicely.

      The language I've created to build the OS with runs as either compiled or interpreted code, making it easy to create, test, and add new modules in real-time. To this end I use the upper 25 rows for program output / display, and the lower rows for the debugger and "immediate" mode code editor. It's sort of like a limited tiling WM, or GNU screen-ish interface. I used to develop code in DOS based applications decades ago, and initially thought that modern graphical environments were far better suited to development. Naturally, I thought I'd be really cramped for space but it actually has worked out to be more comfortable in comparison. I've got noticeably less eyestrain than when I do my "day job" work in a modern IDE. It seems that what you say is true: 80x25 rows or so is all one really needs with a scrolling display. However, I supplement my short term memory with the additional pane.

      Now reconsidering my stance against using console based editors in favor of IDEs for development on "proper" OSs as well...

    54. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
      Or, you could stop limiting yourself to 80 columns for your code...

      But what if you need to dump to punched cards?

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    55. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
      Human vision is irrelevant. Its the A4 page that is the issue. Either way, appalling lack of pixels is probably one reaon why some of us prefer our old laptops to the new ones, causling the death of the laptop industry.

      Lenovo: Look what happened to HTC (removed removable batteries and storage - lost all their customers) - if your product goes backwards (My old model Thinkpad is 1990x1024, new models only do x768), so will your sales.

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    56. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      You do realize that there are settings in windows to make the font sizes and even icons larger, which allows you to keep the additional resolution do display more information in other ways?

      Earlier this year, I ordered a 1920x1080 laptop from dell. They screwed up and sent me the x768 screen. I didn't notice when I was simply transferring files/installing some initial programs, but the moment I went to do some serious reading I noticed the lack of resolution and made them send me the better screen.

      My previous laptop had a 1920x1200 screen, and I miss those 120 lines from the bottom. Unfortunately, it was 5 years old at that point and the power supply/battery charger system is no longer reliable. IE I plug the DC adapter into it and it wouldn't acknowledge it. Sometimes.

      Step back indeed. I'd pay an extra $200+ for the higher resolutions, unfortuantly they're so rare today it's more like a $1k option.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    57. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Raumkraut · · Score: 1

      But the area we can actively focus on is far more restricted than our field of vision as a whole.

      Widescreen is great for action games, where peripheral vision can mean the difference between pwn and pwn'd. For actually doing work, having things in your peripheral vision is just a distraction.

    58. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by maxwell+demon · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Who's talking about laptops?

      Everyone in this thread, but you. You know, it's the topic of the thread (and of the story, BTW).

      Anyone who uses a laptop and bitches about screen real estate should just plug in an external monitor and shut the fuck up.

      Yeah, sure. I'll carry an extra monitor around with me, sure.

      At home, I've got a monitor that is large enough that I can display two A4 pages side by side in 1:1 size, so a widescreen makes sense. For my laptop that would be too large to carry around. A laptop screen is always a compromise between portability and usability. And the 4:3 screen is simply the best compromise unless you use it primarily to watch movies.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    59. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by unitron · · Score: 1

      They are not widescreen, they are reduced height. When you look at them in this way you understand the complaints.

      THIS!

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    60. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      BTW, A0 has an are of 1 m^2, A(n+1) obviously has half the area of An.

      So if you ever need the size of an An paper but have no chance to look it up, you can always easily calculate it from the specification.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    61. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by MagusSlurpy · · Score: 1

      Most of the Samsung hate I have encountered (and I'll be honest, contributed) is due to the quality of their builds and engineering, not necessarily their ideas.

      --
      My sister opened a computer store in Hawaii. She sells C shells by the seashore.
    62. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Can you smell the irony, of posting this "bring back 4:3" crap on a site whose layout takes full advantage of widescreen.

      Does it? The display area of my browser window has a 4:3 format (I've decided to make other use of that extra area because for the vast majority of web sites a wider display area just means lot of wasted space left and right anyway). And even in that, the comments have overly large horizontal size.

      The only part of Slashdot which "makes use" of the larger screen size is the front page where they horizontally enlarged the right column. But not because it is better that way, but because that way they could fit ads on the top of that column without breaking the layout (which regularly happened with those ads before the change, when they started to place ads at that position).

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    63. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Sure but that is where the "sucker born every minute" comes from, if one is smart enough to read tech sites they ought to be able to do a simple Google Search, its not like one has to actually do any work here. Just "Name of unit, model, tech specs" and voila! There they are.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    64. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Petersson · · Score: 1

      The real solution to this is to go back to 80x25 screens, and better short-term memory. You think I'm joking, but I'm not.
      On 10" screen with 300 ppi and proper fonts the 80x25 text mode will just look great.
      Let's keep VGA compatibility with some style.

      --
      I'm not insane. My mother had me tested.
    65. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by icebraining · · Score: 1

      Seems like a "rotatable" 16:10 would be better for your use case.

    66. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Geeky · · Score: 1

      It does, but in an annoying way. If I maximise the browser window, even on a 4:3 display, the comments stretch too far - it's far easier to read a long paragraph if it's relatively narrow and tall than if it's stretched across the whole width of the screen.

      --
      Sigs are so 1990s. No way would I be seen dead with one.
    67. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by RaceProUK · · Score: 1

      Asus Transformer.

      --
      No colour or religion ever stopped the bullet from a gun
    68. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by dingen · · Score: 1

      I'm not aware of a way to use the Asus Transformer as a laptop (with a keyboard) in portrait mode.

      --
      Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
    69. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Ash+Vince · · Score: 1

      They are not widescreen, they are reduced height. When you look at them in this way you understand the complaints.

      Which actually makes them easier to use on planes.

      If you make the screen full height, ie 4:3 ratio then as soon as the guy in front of you gets some sleep and reclines his seat back, it nicely crushes your laptop screen against your seat table (which makes a horrendous cracking noise and wakes him up). This can still happen with any laptop if you have it right up against the seat back in front of you but a smaller screen vertically makes it much easier to not do this.

      In my opinion closely matching the screen shape to the shape of the keyboard and trackpad on the bottom half is actually a good idea.

      I used to have a huge laptop but I definitely prefer my smaller lenovo I have now. Is it 1200*800 in a 12inch form factor and includes a DVD drive and decent CPU so it is not a netbook. Unfortunately it is a few years old now and I can't seem to find a decent replacement without shelling out a grand or two. Even then the current equivalent model to my old 3000 v100 does not seem to share the same resolution.

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    70. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by BlackSnake112 · · Score: 1

      How was cutting the 16:10 laptop screens out o f the picture a win for 16:9 screens? Try using a 16:10 laptop screen for a while. I have people look at my laptop and they like the bigger screen. They also have a 17 laptop but my screen feel bigger. People like the that screen. The screen companies dropped 16:10 screens for cost. That was not consumers making a decision. 16:9 screen meshed with the 16:9 TV screens. The screen manufacturers forced 16:9. Then what 19:9 ratios fit on a 13 and 15 screens? 1366x768 and 1440x900 fit both the aspect ratio and screen sizes.

      Most regular people do not even look at the aspect ratio, they are looking for a 13 laptop or a 15 inch laptop. I know a number of people who bought a new laptop with a lower resolution then their old laptop and were wondering why things looked off. Companies cont on people not knowing. Could you imagine if very few people bought the new laptop since they wanted better screens? It would be great for standards. Forcing the companies to put out a product that the people want. Instead of putting out a product and saying here take it or leave it. More people have to want the bigger aspect ratio screens. Until that happens. we are stuck with the crappy screens.

    71. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by pmontra · · Score: 1

      You're right. That's why I bring my eeepc901 on planes, but I hardly fly for business and that small netbook is adequate when I go on vacation. It still does some things my phone doesn't do well (programming, storing emails for offllne use, backup for photos) and the other way round (almost anything else).

      The eeepc fits well on my knees (one knee, actually - it's tiny) and I don't have to use the seat table. That gives me more room. My 16:10 15" laptop is a little too large and sometimes I have the kind of problems you run into. The eeepc is also better on trains, even if there are less problems with space there.

      Nevertheless planes and trains are not major use cases for me and I'm looking forward to taller displays. Hopefully I won't have to change my laptop soon (fingers crossed) and I'm waiting to see what happens with resolution, size and touch displays.

    72. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by NateTech · · Score: 1

      80? Heck I was using 32.

      --
      +++OK ATH
    73. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by cthulhu11 · · Score: 1

      There are a number of projected aspect ratios. 2.35:1 is one, but there are others.

    74. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Uhhh....sure it does, you just don't want to pay the market price for a niche item is all. Go to Tigerdirect or any website and look under "Gamer laptops" and you'll find plenty of high res screens with high powered graphics cards to drive those high res screens, just be ready to pay a premium because you're not gonna drive modern multimedia and games at that high a resolution with cheap junk IGPs. I don't have time now to go through the list to find a 2500 res, but the minimum on the gamer units now is 1080P with IIRC the Razr and Alienwares both going higher. There is also the Thinkpads designed for the medical industry, they have insanely high resolutions and $4k+ price tags to go with those insane specs.

      If you want it SOMEBODY will build it and sell it to you, you just can't expect to get it for the same price as that $399 Acer special. That is what Torvalds is whining about and...well too bad, the yields on 2500 res screens sucks and this raises costs and in a cutthroat market high costs equal low sales. people looked, they chose, the market has spoken. As I said i bought a 12 inch with 1366x768 and I'm happy with that resolution and didn't want to pay double the price for a 1080p in that form factor, so the market works as intended. popular becomes cheaper, niche is expensive.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    75. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Ritchie70 · · Score: 1

      The laptop is generally a piece of crap, so I'm not sinking any more money into it. I've obviously learned my lesson. I did look at the specs and it seemed like a decent price for what it was - i7, 8GB, discrete graphics, big hard drive. I just missed the screen resolution spec - which manufacturers tend to hide these days.

      But don't tell me to buy a desktop. I don't want a desktop. If I own a desktop I have to sit at a desk to use it, that's why it's called that. And I don't have a good place for a computer desk, except upstairs in a spare bedroom or somewhere in the basement.

      I don't want to sit at a desk, I want to sit on the sofa and fool around online, check work email, check personal email, and look things up in the course of living my life. I want to carry it to the printer (in the basement) when I'm printing shipping labels. I want to take it to the kitchen if I'm cooking a recipe I found online. I want to watch the latest Dr. Who via streaming video (legally) while I clean up the kitchen and make lunch for tomorrow. I want to let my nephew use it sitting on the floor in our living room at the coffee table where I can see everything he's doing.

      Sure, if I'm spending my day coding, I want a desktop-like environment. Multiple screens, proper keyboard and mouse. I do that at work. I don't do it at home.

      MY advice to YOU? Ditch the fancy desktop and get a decent laptop to use at home instead of sitting at some fixed position in your home to Use The Computer.

      --
      The preferred solution is to not have a problem.
    76. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by overmod · · Score: 1

      What extra little bit of vertical space would that be?

      Ceteris paribus, a display with 16:10 with the same horizontal number of pixels would have less, not more, vertical 'space' than 16:9 (given comparable pixel proportion, which seems likely as changing it would distort images).

      Even if you add pixels to one side to get to 16:10 (making the display more expensive without adding anything more useful for flatscreen-television purposes... which you may recall is where the economics for all this widescreen business comes from) you still have the same vertical 'space' as the 16:9.

      What am I missing?

       

    77. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by hjf · · Score: 1

      I live in south america. There's no such thing as a laptop for medical industry here. Even in the most high tech shops, you can only get "good enough". Except, of course, Apple. With a price tag 2x-3x of US price (import tariffs are irrelevant in this case).

    78. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by randyleepublic · · Score: 1

      2048x1536? Nope. Not anymore. Devo was right about everything...

      --
      Social Credit would solve everything...
    79. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      Just because YOU are stuck in 1972 doesn't mean the rest of us are. Extended comments past 80 chars keeps the clutter to a minimum.

      Heck I even designed my programming font because the 'font leading' (the number of pixels rows of whitespace between rows) sucks for all the popular monospaced (non-proportional) ones (Proggy, Consolas, Lucida Console, Ultimate Apple II Font, etc.)

    80. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by TheGavster · · Score: 1

      A "full HD" display at 16:9 is 1920x1080 pixels. Keeping the horizontal pixel count, 1920, the same, a 16:10 display would be 1920x1200. The additional 180 vertical pixels is a ~10% increase in vertical space.

      You do point out, correctly, that it is also a 10% increase in the area of display that must be produced (Even assuming that increasing the size of a blank has a low marginal cost, the flaws per unit area are constant and reduce yield). For economies of scale, I don't think that there's that much loss though, as a purpose-built television in the 20-26" range likely would target a 720-line resolution due to the increased viewing distance. The finer pixel pitch is only really useful in a computer display.

      --
      "Because Science" is one step from "Because old book". Try "Because of my experiment testing my falsifiable assertion".
    81. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Oh please, you are just trying to justify being LAZY, that's all. That's like justifying tablets by saying "I can watch youTube while taking a shit"...damn, get your big ass off the couch already!

      And never heard of remoting in? Sheesh, kids these days. i can take this $350 netbook I have and do anything your i7 can do only BETTER because I can access a fully powered desktop with it anywhere I want. hell you can even slap a wireless HDMI on the set and can use your big ass TV like the sweetest monitor you ever seen, and it don't make a diddly damned where the fricking box is!

      Like I said, sucker born every minute...man I bet the OEMs loove you! Buys a thousand dollar laptop, does squat for homework, buys a junker, hell you are their fricking wet dream! Word of advice, build a decent desktop, set it up in the basement or wherever with remote access, you can then put the printer whereever the fuck you want, hell i got one customer has his in the hall closet, then just get one of them $400 AMD quad laptops. that will give you plenty of power when you are actually OUT of the house, and the unit will let you offload all the heavy duty work to the desktop...voila! Best of everything. hell get a wireless keyboard and mouse and you can use the laptop as a thin client to remote to the basement and blast the whole thing over HDMI onto your big set, never have to get up then.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    82. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      Actually, 2560x1920 would be better. But apparently more people use their laptops to watch videos than to do work.

      ==========
      I would like the option to flip the screen to 1920x2560, In this way, I can see a full legal sized text document on screen without scrolling.
      But, with increased pixal density, does that not increase power consumption. I have a tiny netbook, running Fedora. The display is not bright enough for bright daylight, but at almost 5 hours of battery life, I have no complaints. Perhaps the solution is to also provide larger capacity batteries. My netbook battery is about 5 hours, my new Samsung dual core I3 laptop with battery is about 30 to 40 minutes. I have no idea why such poor performance.

      Boost the battery capacity and in order to boost the pixals. Allow me to physically rotate the laptop to have the image automaticlly switch, to enable me to read a long (legal sized) document without scrolling.

      I already use a wireless mouse and wireless keyboard to avoid carpal tunnel problems due to laptop keyboard layouts. Layouts meant to conform to the space space available as opposed to fingertip space relationships.

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    83. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Crosshair84 · · Score: 1

      Exactly, ask anyone if they would want a laptop with a 2560x1600 monitor and they will say yes. The REAL test is to see if they are willing for forgo something to have the money to buy that laptop.

      Resources are always limited and so everything is about tradeoffs. Sure I can spend $2000 on that high-res laptop vs the $400 one, but what else could I have used that $1,600 for? The vast majority of people would rather use that money for other things. Linus might as well be complaining that not every laptop is an i7 with 32 gb of ram and a 1tb SSD. He's living in a fantasy while his creation can't even do 720 video without crapping all over itself..

    84. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by badkarmadayaccount · · Score: 1

      Two columns, newspaper style? One logically concatenated with the other, scrolling in lockstep? I hereby release this in the public domain.

      --
      I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.
    85. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by wed128 · · Score: 1

      Just because YOU are stuck in 1972 doesn't mean the rest of us are. Extended comments past 80 chars keeps the clutter to a minimum.

      That's a matter of opinion. I think 'wide' rows look more cluttered. I like to run many terminals; forcing some to be very wide makes my desktop messy.

    86. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      Tradition is always a matter of opinion.

      Why are you viewing code in a terminal and not in a proper editor like vim, emacs, pico, nano, etc where you can toggle word-wrap ?

    87. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by wed128 · · Score: 1

      I do use emacs. In a terminal. with word-wrap enabled. i'd still rather have sane column widths.

    88. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      Word wrap looks far far worse (and is more confusing) than multi-line properly-indented code.

      That being said I like wide wide terminals to have code with long lines!

    89. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      And while your at it, make the basement machine a linux workhorse. I always have access to a full linux desktop (via NX) or a simple console session. I get the privacy and security of a machine I own and control, and the anywhere access of the cloud.

      I also keep a windows machine around for gaming.

    90. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Ritchie70 · · Score: 2

      Maybe I'm a sucker but you're clearly an asshole.

      It's easier to fix sucker.

      --
      The preferred solution is to not have a problem.
    91. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      It doesn't really matter WHAT you put on the basement machine, the point was this guy is throwing away over a grand a pop on fricking laptops...to SIT ON HIS COUCH!!!!

      You do NOT need some uber road warrior gamer laptop to sit your lazy ass on a couch and get real work done, not when you could use ANY bargain basement laptop to do the basic email and office stuff and just remote into a desktop, which will be faster, cheaper, have more storage, and better performance, and he still won't have to get his lazy ass off the couch!

      I don't know about you pnutjam, but these yo yos that think they have to do every. single. thing. on a portable device...and then NEVER GO ANYWHERE are fricking insane! He must give OEMs a hard on when he walks through the door, he spends money like water, doesn't check the specs, doesn't read reviews, and he's never gonna be away from an outlet so he won't even know if the battery is shite or not! Talk about a dream sucker...errr customer!

      Hell they were selling AMD quad kits just the other day on Tiger for $159, that's for 3.3GHz with 4Gb of RAM and a DVD burner and nice case, all you had to do was throw in whatever drives you wanted. And that system would SMOKE his laptop simply because every damned thing in a laptop is built for lower heat and battery life.

      So he could solve ALL his problems by simply getting a decent desktop and just remoting into the thing, but no, because I won't agree that doing things the STUPID way is a smart idea he instead calls me an asshole. But at least I can sit on my couch, do every single thing he does and more, and my netbook cost a grand total of $350. I'd say that makes him a classic ID10T error if ever I saw one, don't you think?

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    92. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      I'm sure you can find an American site that will ship to you, may not be cheap, but if there is money to be made somebody will make it.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    93. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      But, with increased pixal density, does that not increase power consumption.

      I don't have actual data, but I think the main energy consumption is by the backlight, not the actual LCD. Therefore I think the power consumption should be dependent more on the physical screen size than the pixel density.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    94. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by hjf · · Score: 1

      Do a quick search on any of the high profile sites (Newegg) and shady ones (Ebay) and you'll find that none ship outside US. I don't know why.

      Also, sending a laptop over DHL or Fedex internationally will set me back $300+

    95. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      then again, if you're on windows you could just have upped the dpi setting like you're supposed to if you have high pixel density display.

      (1920x1080 15" here. upping that setting is an absolute must. but with it I couldn't give a fuck about cleartype since the dpi is okay)

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    96. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      try 78, so you can email it.

      No, 72 to leave space for the sequence number.

      I mean, how else are you going to sort your deck after you drop it?

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    97. Re:2560x1600 should be good for anyone! by Kyusaku+Natsume · · Score: 1

      Because most shipments get stolen at customs or by the post service personnel. It sucks but even for Mexico is hard to buy parts in USA. Is easier, cheaper, faster an sometimes even more reliable to ask someone that is on a trip to USA than buy online.

      --
      Mexico: 100% conservative's America now!
  2. Agree 100% by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    My 7 year old laptop had a 1920x1200 resolution and when I bought a new one a few months ago I had to look all over just to find one that had a 1920x1080 resolution.

    1. Re:Agree 100% by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 5, Interesting

      My 7 year old laptop had a 1920x1200 resolution and when I bought a new one a few months ago I had to look all over just to find one that had a 1920x1080 resolution.

      We share the same gripe. This was posted from my 8½ year old laptop, which also has WUXGA (1920x1200) resolution. I'm holding out on replacing it until I can get something with more pixels. Shortscreen FHD (1920x1080) is a step downwards, while I want to go upwards in pixels. Luckily, Xubuntu 12.04 runs fine on this old hardware.

      --
      Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
    2. Re:Agree 100% by TWX · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Hell, I had a 14" Daytek by Daewoo tube monitor that could handle 1600x1200 in 1996. It's disappointing that it hasn't gotten better.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    3. Re:Agree 100% by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Agree 200%. Screens have been getting worse in most laptop lines for a while. God I hatted having to go from the 1400x1050 15" IPS matte screen to a 1400x900 TN with eye bleeding glare.

    4. Re:Agree 100% by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Hell, the 'step down' is happening among monitors as well. I have 1920x1200 on my monitors and everything I see in a reasonable consumer space has gone 'down' to just HD pixels of 1920x1080.

      And my 24/28" monitors weren't anything special, under $500 a few years ago.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    5. Re:Agree 100% by noh8rz10 · · Score: 4, Funny

      breaking news: linus tells everybody to get a retina macbook.

    6. Re:Agree 100% by H0p313ss · · Score: 4, Insightful

      My 7 year old laptop had a 1920x1200 resolution and when I bought a new one a few months ago I had to look all over just to find one that had a 1920x1080 resolution.

      Which is precisely why I went to a macbook. Apple isn't perfect, but goddamn they make sexy hardware.

      --
      XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
    7. Re:Agree 100% by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Hell, T61p motherboards fit in the 14" T60 cases which can take a 2048x1536 screen; such FrankenPads are becoming pretty common among those that refuse to give up our pixels when 'upgrading' since the transplant gives us a chance to properly clean and refurbish every single part in the machine in the process.

      Note, these were available over 5 years ago.

      2048x1536 in a 14" laptop.

      5 YEARS AGO!

      WTF!?

    8. Re:Agree 100% by should_be_linear · · Score: 1, Informative

      Reason is: Microsoft Windows. Many applications, including Desktop itself, was not fully scalable for many years, and I am not sure even what is current status. Especially if we caunt all Total Commanders, WinRars etc. that must be installed from 3rd party, to get anything done.

      --
      839*929
    9. Re:Agree 100% by usagimaru · · Score: 1

      16:9 seems to be cheaper to mass produce than 16:10. The prices are currently lower and the quantities are higher on Newegg at least.
      If anything, pushing for 2560x1440 would be more attainable.

    10. Re:Agree 100% by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The 16:9 format is cheaper to produce simply because it's the most produced screen format for the television market. Once that was standardized it was inevitable that the computer monitor market would follow rather than have the manufacturers produce a better screen at lower quantities for the computer industry.

    11. Re:Agree 100% by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I'm sure I'll get downmodded, but dont buy an Apple.

    12. Re:Agree 100% by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You mean you had to look all over just to find one that's in your price range. Many exist, but they're not always the cheapest.

    13. Re:Agree 100% by gman003 · · Score: 2

      My 1080p 17" laptop shipped with scaling set to 125%.

      Most things worked. Chrome didn't listen to it - it actually broke antialiasing, it looked like. Firefox scaled text but not images. A few programs had weirdness with the toolbars - they scaled up the text, but not graphics, so things kind of looked ugly. But everything else worked fine.

      I still ended up disabling it, because I regularly plug in to a 22" 1080p monitor and a similar-DPI 1280x1024 monitor (or something like that). And 1080p on a 17" isn't that cramped, although it would be much worse on a 15" 2560x1600 monitor.

      Overall, Windows does a pretty decent job at scaling. If they could make it so you could exempt applications from the scaling rules, and get browsers to better merge OS-level scaling settings with their own zoom settings, it would be pretty close to perfect.

    14. Re:Agree 100% by PrimaryConsult · · Score: 2

      I, too have a 28" 1920x1200... I had been looking for a better quality one (one which can letterbox 1920x1080 so that my PS3 isn't vertically stretched) but I gave up after realizing I can't even find something *as good* as the one I have. When this goes I'll probably do something weird like use a 1080p TV as my primary display and an old 20" widescreen rotated 90 degrees for web browsing / document viewing...

    15. Re:Agree 100% by StripedCow · · Score: 2

      Unfortunately, the next Slashdot article will be about a design patent that Apple has on laptops with a high resolution.

      --
      If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
    16. Re:Agree 100% by tibman · · Score: 2

      Definitely : ) The fonts look really good: http://www.freetype.org/freetype2/index.html

      --
      http://soylentnews.org/~tibman
    17. Re:Agree 100% by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Well, technically you should be saying go buy your display from the company that Apple buys it's badged displays from to sell to you after another company has assembled it into a computer.

      Personally I say screw America and it's time to go for hard metric displays so you can scale right off the screen. Forget the weird dots be inch bullshit and crazy odd widths and heights and let's go hard metric.

      PS while we are at it, let's also drop the badging bullshit. When a company doesn't make shit, we should put an end to the bullshit about it making shit. Apple just badges hardware, shit it doesn't even make the badges or even the boxes the hardware comes. Apple is just a middle man to other companies hardware.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    18. Re:Agree 100% by Nerdfest · · Score: 2

      Yes, I'm sure Linux is thrilled by the direction Apple is trying to push the softare industry.

    19. Re:Agree 100% by utkonos · · Score: 1

      If the television industry moves to a larger resolution as the norm, then the computer monitor industry will have reasonably priced monitors at that resolution. Not before.

    20. Re:Agree 100% by ghinckley68 · · Score: 1

      T60 with 1400 x 1050 15" IPS panel still cant find much to replace it.

      1920x1080 is no better than my 6 year old t60

      4x3 rules when you need to do work.

      --
      Linux modi 2.6.26-2-parisc
    21. Re:Agree 100% by elfprince13 · · Score: 1

      He's not a OS X user anyway. Xubuntu, or Windows ought to do fine.

    22. Re:Agree 100% by ikaruga · · Score: 1

      Same here. As for now the only 14-15 inch laptop I'm willing to buy(and actually bought) is the MBP retina and even though I don't like Apple either. Sure the first thing I do is installing Windows 7 and Virtual Box for Ubuntu(it's a shame that bootcamp doesn't support linux). As a previous Vaio Z owner(and fan) I'm disappointed at sony for not having a modern display on their high end laptops. They're losing a costumer.

      However, for 13 inch and bellow, I think the newest 1080p Asus Zenbook with the discrete graphics chip is good enough for me. High resolution is great and everything but I don't see the need on such small devices. I'm not a tablet user but if I used one I would prefer the Transformer 700 over the nexus 10 since it already has a 1080p display on a 10 inch and on top of that USB ports, microSD card support and the best docking keyboard in the market and software support is decent.

      Finally, I just would like to say that there are other important factors to a display other than ppi. My Xperia Acro HD phone has an IPS 720p display on 4.3 inch which means 344ppi. That is freaking excessive. I'd rather they reduced the resolution by ~30% and instead used an OLED based display for better colors, view angles and contrast. OLED displays on laptops and desktops, specially for artists, doctors/medical staff and scientists/engineers that deal with a lot of visual data is without a doubt a killer feature. High resolution is great but shouldn't be the sole focus just for the sake of marketing.

    23. Re:Agree 100% by HiThere · · Score: 2

      Sorry, I can't accept their EULA.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    24. Re:Agree 100% by rrohbeck · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yay for Yamakasi and Crossover. Why isn't any of the big boys importing them yet? I'm a little hesitant to buy on eBay with questionable warranty.

    25. Re:Agree 100% by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      Presumably he wants more pixels and a video card that can drive them.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    26. Re:Agree 100% by chmod+a+x+mojo · · Score: 2

      Whats so weird about using a HDTV as a monitor? I've been using my 40" 1080P Bravia for a few yeas now after I got it on sale. Almost all GFX cards and newer notebooks ( including many netbooks ) output directly to HDMI so it makes it stupid easy to connect to pretty much any random TV made in the last what, something like 5-6 years?

       

      --
      To err is human; effective mayhem requires the root password!
    27. Re:Agree 100% by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      Firefox scaled text but not images

      Then firefox worked correctly. The default behavior should be to scale and/or reflow the text and possibly other procedurally defined elements, but to lock the raster elements to the actual pixels on the screen.

      If there were an option to request a higher resolution image from the server, that would be helpful, but unless the website is sending massively oversized images so that they can be scaled down to the appropriate screen size (as apple has done with desktop icons for a while now, despite not being particularly serious about resolution independence), the browser should not scale the images unless specifically asked to by the user.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    28. Re:Agree 100% by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      Nothing 'weird' about it, but when my current monitors have 1920x1200, going 'down' to 1920x1080 just seems, ahem, stupid.

      I grant you that the standard HDMI sizing and plugs make it 'stupid easy' to do, but 'stupid easy' isn't usually also 'best quality'

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    29. Re:Agree 100% by blahbooboo · · Score: 2

      Heck I have a 20" 1600x1200 monitor and it's great. Crazy to think to get larger screen which only hash out same resolution 7 years !

    30. Re:Agree 100% by epine · · Score: 2

      Hell, I had a 14" Daytek by Daewoo tube monitor that could handle 1600x1200 in 1996. It's disappointing that it hasn't gotten better.

      No it didn't. The electronics would show a picture when fed such a signal, but the phosphor wasn't adequate to show all the pixels. I had a monitor in 1991 which would take 1600x1200 interlaced. The displayed picture wasn't worth a damn *and* it gave you headaches. It worked best 768x1024. Yeah, I've *always* written rows x columns. Just yesterday I learned that the qubit value 1 represents boolean false. In small white text in the top corner of the David Deutsch lecture was written "Don't shoot me. It wasn't my idea." or something to that effect. First you need the idiot to get it wrong. Then you need all the idiots to follow along. It's 25x80 in text mode, then its magically 800x600 in graphics mode, with no change between portrait and landscape. The windowing layer might be x,y but for me the device specification is only ever rows,columns.

      IIRC to display clear pixels on a CRT, the pixel needs to be about 30% larger than the rated dot pitch.

      The real tragedy of 100 dpi displays is not whether they display decent small fonts, but whether they show decent small fonts at any desired size. They don't. Some sizes look good, some look horrific. Around the transition between single pixel strokes and double pixel strokes lies ugliness to a higher power.

    31. Re:Agree 100% by Guy+Harris · · Score: 3, Informative

      Fair enough. I don't think many here would begrudge you buying Apple for the hardware. The quality and design are clearly very high. All the problems I hear about Apple are about it's walled garden (purely a software issue).

      ...and it's only iOS where you have to jailbreak to climb over the walls; for OS X you aren't obliged to run App Store apps (or even apps from "registered developers", although the Gatekeeper default setting requires that you control+click those and select "Open" to launch binaries downloaded from a network not signed by a registered developer - compile the binary yourself, or download it with something that doesn't slap a quarantine extended attribute on it, and that's not an issue, though).

    32. Re:Agree 100% by gman003 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps, by your definition of "correct". However, I found many web *pages* were unable to cope with that, particularly those with more elaborate layouts. I would prefer the behavior of Firefox's zoom functionality, where all elements are scaled (although that doesn't scale the browser UI, which might also be desirable).

    33. Re:Agree 100% by elashish14 · · Score: 4, Informative

      There's just one reason why that wouldn't be very helpful:

      Retina display MacBook Pro does not play nicely with Linux ...

      --
      I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    34. Re:Agree 100% by kimvette · · Score: 2

      I've got a 25.5" monitor (a Samsung T260HD) and an Acer monitor (the Sammy was discontinued when I replaced my other screen). Both are 1920x1200. I've been looking into displays again to upgrade to 3D for gaming, and they max out at 1080p. Even if I want to drop $1K on a monitor, if you want 3D 1080p is as good as it gets. as far as I'm concerned that's a downgrade. I need the vertical screen estate for actual work.

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    35. Re:Agree 100% by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      I haven't checked in a while because I usually don't use firefox (nothing against it, though), but the last time I used it, it was a configurable option whether or not the images scaled when you scaled the page.

      I've decided to meet you halfway, though. I think you're right about the UI scaling, in fact, I think that the UI scaling is the only appropriate thing for a browser to do in response to an OS-level scaling setting. The pages themselves should be fully under the control of the browser, with the initial setting being one where raster elements are not scaled.

      But web page designers should also not get off the hook for designing their pages so that they won't work if you scale the text and not the images, or in slashdot's case, so that they don't work so well if you scale it at all, images or not. A web page isn't a brochure or a magazine page.

      It should behave when a user wants to change things about it, whether that be the width of the canvas or the size of the text or images. The user is changing those things because they want to see the damn page better, don't fight them!

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    36. Re:Agree 100% by H0p313ss · · Score: 1

      ... (it's a shame that bootcamp doesn't support linux)....

      I have not tried this but there appear to be instructions for installing ubuntu on macbooks.

      --
      XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
    37. Re:Agree 100% by Glendale2x · · Score: 2

      Shortscreen FHD (1920x1080) is a step downwards

      No no, it's "HDTV", an upgrade! That's what happened, people wanted "HD" because it was an upgrade for their TV and thus computer displays went down to meet their expectations.

      --
      this is my sig
    38. Re:Agree 100% by Darinbob · · Score: 2

      That's more resolution than my large screen lcd computer monitor at home...

      The problem really is that the applications haven't caught up really and don't know how to deal with huge screen area, whereas on phones all the applications are brand new.

      I actually use the higher resolution to shove in more windows rather than have the same number of windows smoothed to a degree where no human eye can detect the pixels anymore.

    39. Re:Agree 100% by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      I'd rather have a large screen at 1600x1200 than a miniature macbook screen at some mythical retinal resolution. I can see the large screens, I can not read a damned thing on some kid's iphone though.

    40. Re:Agree 100% by toddestan · · Score: 3, Informative

      It also doesn't help that monitors are sold by the diagonal of the screen, and by making them wider they can make the monitor smaller (by surface area) while still selling it at the same "size" (by diagonal measurement) as the old models.

    41. Re:Agree 100% by 3dr · · Score: 2

      The race for "HD" televisions has ruined computer monitor selection. It's like most computer users didn't realize their computer monitors were higher-resolution than their new flat TVs, or they didn't realize the importance. It's utter crap what is available out there. Most of the available monitors seem to be 1920x1080; it's hard to find one with even 1200 rows, for example.

      I will not be surprised when manufacturers bring back higher-resolution displays and couch them in MP-speak. We'll have 2MP displays, then 3MP, then Apple will rename their 15" Retina display the "Retina 5MP" (which a mere renaming of the current size of that display).

    42. Re:Agree 100% by gman003 · · Score: 1

      I haven't checked in a while because I usually don't use firefox (nothing against it, though), but the last time I used it, it was a configurable option whether or not the images scaled when you scaled the page.

      Just checked, that is indeed an option.

      I've decided to meet you halfway, though. I think you're right about the UI scaling, in fact, I think that the UI scaling is the only appropriate thing for a browser to do in response to an OS-level scaling setting. The pages themselves should be fully under the control of the browser, with the initial setting being one where raster elements are not scaled.

      Halfway is better than most people meet me. Your point about the browser only scaling UI depending on the OS setting makes sense, but I would take it a bit further and let the browser use the OS zoom setting as the *default* page zoom (or rather, the default default page zoom - when deciding what the default zoom should be, it should default to the OS setting). Purely as a convenience, though. It's logical to assume that if the OS is set to 125% scaling, the browser should start with that.

      And while I would prefer the initial setting being *to* scale raster elements, as long as it's selectable I really don't care. And it definitely should be a setting - maybe even a per-page setting, since some pages might need image scaling, while others wouldn't.

      But web page designers should also not get off the hook for designing their pages so that they won't work if you scale the text and not the images, or in slashdot's case, so that they don't work so well if you scale it at all, images or not. A web page isn't a brochure or a magazine page.

      It should behave when a user wants to change things about it, whether that be the width of the canvas or the size of the text or images. The user is changing those things because they want to see the damn page better, don't fight them!

      An excellent point. Actually, tomorrow at work I'll do some quick testing with our own websites, to make sure it works reasonably well at common zoom settings, both scaling images and not scaling images. If it breaks horribly, I'll yell at the designer until he fixes it.

    43. Re:Agree 100% by jandrese · · Score: 1

      One think I think people forget is just how crazy expensive those old high resolution displays were. They were a niche market and priced like one. These days you can pick up a 1080p display for like $125. That's why it's so hard to find higher resolution panels. They would be $600+ and only offer a modest increase in the number of pixels. That's why it took someone with massive clout like Apple to really push the boundaries on resolution again.

      Then again, when my ancient Dell Inspiron 6000 with it's 1920x1200 display died on me, I was utterly disgusted with the offerings from every manufacturer. So many 1280x800 displays as the high end option it just made me sick. For reference, Dell's current version of my old laptop is the Inspiron 17R, which has exactly 1 option for resolution: 1600x900.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    44. Re:Agree 100% by rgmoore · · Score: 2

      If you want to get a decently priced higher resolution display, you can try getting one of the cheap Korean WQHD (1440p) displays; they sell for around $300 on Ebay. They're a bare bones monitor- a single Dual-link DVI input, no speakers, etc.- but the actual screen is just as good as you'd get in a much more expensive name brand model. I think it's actually the same part, just packaged as cheaply as possible.

      --

      There's no point in questioning authority if you aren't going to listen to the answers.

    45. Re:Agree 100% by rbrander · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm still discovering what my 1998 vintage, 21" Compaq P1210 can do. The last version of Mint, I discovered it doesn't top out at 1600x1200 - a new resolution of 1792x1344 came up in the drivers, and it seems to work. I think the phosphor can show that many pixels, because fonts got smaller but still readable.

      Now, in 1998 when it was made, I don't think you could get 1600x1200; quite the futureproofed product.

      Also, I have to keep it; it doubles as a catwarmer

    46. Re:Agree 100% by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1

      A retina MacBook Pro has lots of pixels. Good.
      Unfortunately they have only 1GB of video memory. Bad.

      To support lots of graphics stuff (eg. FBO texture and renderbuffers, depth buffers, HDR etc etc) the limiting factor is video memory. Dumb ol' PC laptops have versions up to 4 GB of VRAM for 1080p displays. Yet Apple creates these beautiful machines and cripples then with fsck all video memory, when that is the single biggest factor in high performance graphics (I say this as an OpenGL/GLSL dev).

      I really really want to replace my 3 year old 17" 1080p MacBook Pro (matte screen, of course) with a newer Apple model but the Retina machines are just not competitive. They lack lots of video ram. And lack matte screens. And lack 17" form factor. I don't care about the price, I'd just like the good hardware with OS X. Unfortunately Apple hates me (and real power users like me) and don't want to give me any good options. Looks like I'll have to get a Compaq brick with decent hardware and install Linux Mint on it (hoping that the video drivers can be beaten into submission).

      As some other posters pointed out, laptop hardware is not really evolving at the power end (8 battery life? that's for people with iPads) and is actually regressing (in defiance of the Moore's Law general trend in IT).

      Unfortunately even Apple is not immune to this lameness :(

    47. Re:Agree 100% by Askmum · · Score: 1

      Over 10 years ago I had a Dell Latitude 800 with a 15" 1600x1200 screen. I thought that would be the standard for the years to come and that great things were to come.
      That's 133 dpi, convert that to a modern 24" widescreen monitor and you'll get 2560x1600. But you'll only find those in 27" and bigger.

    48. Re:Agree 100% by Retron · · Score: 1

      You could get 1600x1200 back in 98, providing you had enough VRAM on your graphics card. I have an old 17" Iiyama monitor from back then and it supported 1600x1200. (Technically due to the dot pitch being 0.25 it couldn't resolve the pixels, so it wasn't a viable resolution to use, more a "wonder if it works" type of thing).

      I had an 8MB Matrox Millennium G200 back then and Windows 95 was perfectly capable of running at 1600x1200 with the correct drivers.You only needed two megs of VRAM to do that in 256 colours, or 6 megs to do it in 24-bit colour (32-bit colour wasn't an option at any resolution with the drivers I was using back then, 24-bit or "True" colour was as far as they went.)

    49. Re:Agree 100% by smash · · Score: 1

      Doesn't really matter how the screens end up in apple devices - fact is they're the only ones selling 2560x1600 laptops (or higher) right now.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    50. Re:Agree 100% by smash · · Score: 1

      Lots of shitty PC laptops also have 4gb of ram and then skimp out on the video processor, fitting it with something with a small number of shader units (or cores these days) so they have all this video memory they can address but can't actually do anything with.

      Dell - i'm looking at you here.

      But hey, "4gb of video memory!" is something the unwashed masses understand.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    51. Re:Agree 100% by smash · · Score: 1

      Some people don't like pixels the size of marbles.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    52. Re:Agree 100% by hairyfish · · Score: 1

      My 7 year old laptop had a 1920x1200 resolution and when I bought a new one a few months ago I had to look all over just to find one that had a 1920x1080 resolution.

      We share the same gripe.

      Same here. This is being typed on a 7 year old Dell Inspiron with 1680x1050 simply because you can't get a low end higher res web machine for under $1000 these days.

    53. Re:Agree 100% by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      The Macbook Pro's screen is the wrong resolution.

      To make things look nice you need a screen that is exactly 2x your "working" resolution. Otherwise scaled bitmaps look terrible, and if you hadn't noticed web pages and a lot of apps use lots of them. The Macbook Pro's screen is 2880x1800, giving you an effective resolution of only 1440x900. So everything will look sharp but you get much less usable screen real-estate than a 1920x1080 laptop. Actually 1680x1050 pixels seems to be about the sweet spot for a 13" screen.

      So really we need a laptop with a 4k 3840x2160 screen, or at least 3360x2100 (twice 1680x1050 WSXGA+).

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    54. Re:Agree 100% by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      The good news is that this has all been fixed in Windows 7. Chrome now scales nicely, as does everything. If an app doesn't support proper scaling then Windows 7 just displays the entire window as a scaled bitmap.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    55. Re:Agree 100% by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1

      I understand your comments. Dells can be decidedly average. The laptop I had in mind is called an "Elitebook" these days from Compaq/HP. They're expensive but pretty much top of the range. Usually their cost is quite high but there are so many model variants I have found out in the past (with forerunners to this series) that it is worth to keep looking, usually there will be a single model where the price goes from ridiculous to actually pretty good 'value' (still a bit expensive) and with great hardware. This used to be the Compaq "nw" series of mobile workstations (eg. the nw8530 was great for Ubuntu before I went to the Mac).

      I kinda filter out the mediocre models you describe, and for the reasons you mention, since they don't really beat my current (although dated) MacBook Pro. I'm looking for something better (hence my lament that Apple hasn't really advanced laptop capabilities for several years in VRAM, GPU or max RAM limits).

    56. Re:Agree 100% by bemymonkey · · Score: 1

      Doesn't run Windows with decent battery life (no working Optimus, and the screen is quite inefficient), no add-on batteries (the slice battery underneath my Thinkpad right now has the same capacity as the Retina MBP's internal battery, and I have another one of the same capacity in the main slot), no trackpoint, easy-to-ding surfaces (who the fuck was it that decided all laptops need sleeves? Fuck sleeves, my Thinkpads look like new without 'em)... it's not really a viable option, unfortunately.

      I'm hoping for a drop-in replacement TFT for Thinkpads at 2560x1440... 15.6" with a 40-pin connector would be just dandy. And the pixel density would be just about right for Windows 7 at 100% scaling (1080p on 15.6" is still far from small). Or maybe 3840x2160, though I'd probably need to crank the scaling up to 150% in that case :)

    57. Re:Agree 100% by bemymonkey · · Score: 1

      If you're talking about desktop monitors: Low-end 1080p displays cost $100 vs. the $400-500 that low-end 1920x1200 displays used to cost... I'd prefer 1200 pixels height as well, but for the price? I've found it's easier to just use the money saved to buy a third (or fourth) display for portrait mode.

    58. Re:Agree 100% by Mattsson · · Score: 2

      When it comes to desktop monitors, I've got the following impression:
      Most 21.5" are 1920x1080, about 102 PPI
      Most 22" are 1680x1050, about 90 PPI
      Most 23" are 1920x1080, about 96 PPI
      Most 24" are 1920x1200, about 94 PPI
      Most cheap 25" to 30" are 1920x1080, though some are 1920x1200, roughly between 74 and 88 PPI
      Most high end 27" are 2560x1440, about 109 PPI
      Most high end 30" are 2560x1600, about 101 PPI

      So the sweet spots are 21.5", 27" and possibly 30"

      --
      /.Mattsson - My native language is not English, so please don't whine over linguistic errors. (That's lame anyway...)
    59. Re:Agree 100% by redback · · Score: 1

      And an optical drive.

      And standard hard disk and ram

      And a keyboard that is usable

      And a real mouse.

    60. Re:Agree 100% by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      I have the same 3 year old macbook pro, and feel exactly the same about the new retina macbooks...
      I prefer the 17" form factor, but i also want upgradeable ram and the option to use standard drives.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    61. Re:Agree 100% by gman003 · · Score: 1

      That *was* on Windows 7. Scaling didn't work perfectly right under either Firefox or Chrome.

    62. Re:Agree 100% by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up!

      100% agree Apple is shitting on the power users:

      * no retina 17"
      * no matte option
      * no hard-wired ethernet port. Wireless is great WHEN it works.

      Thanks for the pointer about the lack of VRAM -- that is interesting. I'm an OpenGL / GLES / WebGL developer too so good to know one more thing to watch out in the retina models. :-/

      Maybe next year revisions ...

    63. Re:Agree 100% by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      Agreed that is more "efficient" to just buy 2 cheap monitors and use the extra cash to buy something like the "Neo-Flex Dual LCD Lift Stand" that will rotate any monitor 360 degrees. :-)
      http://www.ergotron.com/Products/tabid/65/PRDID/241/Language/en-US/Default.aspx

        Both nVidia and ATI drivers have native monitor rotation built-in but just in case you can't activate it for Windows there is an useful utility: "iRotate", which is only 110K.
      http://www.entechtaiwan.com/util/irotate.shtm

    64. Re:Agree 100% by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up as +informative.

      Thanks for the info!

      Does anyone know how the U2412M stands up for hard-core gaming? It is hard to leave a 5 ms response time.

    65. Re:Agree 100% by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      Oblg. "Financial Planning - Long term: the car is cheaper"

      http://www.winecommonsewer.com/.a/6a00d8341cbb0453ef0133f344cd42970b-500pi

    66. Re:Agree 100% by spongman · · Score: 1

      my D830 just died :( i'm not replacing it, though. i'm holding out for a 15" WUXGA.

    67. Re:Agree 100% by cthulhu11 · · Score: 1

      And an optical drive.

      Why not demand an 8" floppy drive while you're at it?

      And standard hard disk and ram

      Nothing nonstandard about the RAM. As for a "standard hard disk", screw that, I'm loving the SSD.

      And a keyboard that is usable

      Somehow I'm managing to type this on mine.

      And a real mouse.

      Nothing stops you from plugging in whatever you want. Trackpad works fine for me.

    68. Re:Agree 100% by cthulhu11 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I can't accept their EULA.

      Grow up.

    69. Re:Agree 100% by Reziac · · Score: 1

      I have two older but fully functional 21" CRTs... I was gonna shitcan 'em (too much trouble to move these 75 pound beasts cross-country), but after reading all the comments about the *reduction* in vertical pixels and thus workspace... maybe not. (I know they do at least 1600x1200, maybe higher.)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    70. Re:Agree 100% by Reziac · · Score: 1

      And when they do MP-speak... whether it'll be real pixels or some manner of interpolated.

      On that note... I have a cheap digital camera that I got to drag around in the truck ($20 made it disposable) that *claims* to be 12MP. After messing with it a bit and examining the images made at its various settings, I concluded that it's actually 1.2MP (yes, THAT low) with a shitload of interpolation, none of which was admitted to in the packaging. (Kodak EasyShare)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    71. Re:Agree 100% by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the input lag link!

      Ugh, 6-bits / channel?! The first page mentions: "The U2412M is also an eIPS panel that is natively 6-bit but uses A-FRC to display 16.7 million colors."

      (2^6)^3 = 64^3 = 262,144 colors. How the heck are they getting 16.7 million colors when the panel can only natively do 256K colors? Interpolating?

      I guess for gaming it would be "good enough" ...

    72. Re:Agree 100% by PhoenixAtlantios · · Score: 1

      Maximum refresh rate is often significantly lower than a monitor would provide. TV shows/movies/etc. are generally 24hz, so the TV doesn't need to provide higher, whilst most monitors are 60hz min. Tried using a cheapish 3D TV for stereo 3D output from a AMD card once - horrid.

    73. Re:Agree 100% by smash · · Score: 1

      We run elitebooks at work and i run an MBP at home, so I know what you mean. Was just making the point that video memory isn't the be all and end all. I don't think the macs are that bad, apps that need more than 1gb of video memory aren't likely to run well on a portable anyway...

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    74. Re:Agree 100% by White+Flame · · Score: 1

      I had (and I think it's still in the garage) one of the Nokia 445 21" CRT monitors. It reported to the video card that it only supported up to 1600x1200, but that's just because that was the highest video card res at the time it was manufactured. I hacked an .inf file for it manually and added 2048x1536 60Hz, which was within the frequency specs of the monitor, and it all worked great. At 640x480 it did over 200Hz, but as that was above its rated vertical frequency, I only tested that a bit and then scaled back.

      Nice thing about that one is that there is zero lag between resolution changes, too. It doesn't cut the display beam at all.

    75. Re:Agree 100% by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1

      I'm writing a flight sim and you'd be amazed that the RAM and CPU requirements are quite modest (provided it is the remote server that does the heavy lifting in multiplayer). It's only the amount of texture/HDR memory you have for high resolutions that becomes the big factor in performance (that, and getting a hot lap :) ).

      Besides being pretty chunky, do you have any notable issues with the EliteBooks?

      ps. "reallydodgy.org" - great name.

    76. Re:Agree 100% by Tore+S+B · · Score: 1

      It almost certainly could not. It could scan a framebuffer with that resolution, but there are a numbers of quite good low-pass filters in the CRT which limit the dot pitch.

      --
      toresbe
    77. Re:Agree 100% by H0p313ss · · Score: 1

      What a lonely life you must lead, thinking plastic is sexy.

      Women are great.

      A) Plastic? ORLY?
      B) You can have both.
      C) You won't get much of a woman for $3000, but you can fill a heck of a lot of lonely evenings with $3000 worth of laptop loving.

      --
      XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
    78. Re:Agree 100% by AlecC · · Score: 1

      I think there are differences. I think Apple designs its own hardware, down to a pretty low level. Including, for example, getting custom components manufactured for them. No, they don't own the assembly line that fits them together. That, in my opinion, is not something to be too worried about. While assembly has its skills, I think it could be recreated if needed, unlike the design skills that make Apple devices different.

      On the other hand, many of the PC manufacturers are just badging stuff designed as well as built in the Far East. They are just becoming middlemen. providing a local-looking face to assemblies of overseas designed and built components.

      --
      Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
    79. Re:Agree 100% by Guy+Harris · · Score: 1

      ....yet

      ...and perhaps not ever.

    80. Re:Agree 100% by smash · · Score: 1

      So far we've found them to be pretty durable and pain free. We were previously a dell shop and we had massive, massive problems with the latitude E series (65xx in particular). We were getting 30% failure rate within 12 months and i was actually shipping out old D series machines to remote sites for improved reliability (this was say, 2008-2009).

      Failure rate on the Elitebooks is back down to 2-3% over 12 months, so we're a lot happier.

      The softpaq management software is a lot easier to use to keep our SOE current with new drivers, etc too.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    81. Re:Agree 100% by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1

      Very interesting. Thanks for posting that useful information. I'll be looking at an Elitebook even more closely when its time to replace my 17" MacbookPro.

    82. Re:Agree 100% by rrohbeck · · Score: 1

      I did it in the meantime, ordered a Shimian QH270. It's stuck in customs waiting for a FCC declaration right now :(

    83. Re:Agree 100% by Chrontius · · Score: 1

      Nothing nonstandard about the RAM. As for a "standard hard disk", screw that, I'm loving the SSD.

      Except for the part where it's soldered on. If they only sold it in the configuration with "As much RAM as the chipset can address", I'd not care about soldered on memory. Alas, that decision complicates my decision to buy an rMBP; I have to save an extra $200 to buy this up front. I also have to save an extra $500 or $1000 to fully upgrade the storage up front; nobody else is making the proprietary modules in similar capacities and speeds. I think I can get a 1-terabyte SSD in the standard 2.5" form factor. (Okay, yes, the OCZ Octane comes in 2.5" SATA3, but it's a bit more expensive than the early reports indicated.) And while it's expensive now, in a couple years when I can either buy a new laptop or upgrade the old one, they'll be relatively cheap. (cheaper?)

      I despair of anyone making the three or four current flavors (form factors) of Macbook SSD a couple years after they launch.

      And this is speaking as an Apple fan. I'm a little worried I'm going to go from "Apple fan" to "Not a computer person" soon.

    84. Re:Agree 100% by Chrontius · · Score: 1

      Actually, there's a slider for that.

      Apple menu, system preferences, displays, and switch from "best for built in display" to "scaled". Now you get to crank the effective resolution up to panel-native, but everything's bleeding tiny like that. But hey, if that makes you productive, go for it.

    85. Re:Agree 100% by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but we have to kill you now, and bury you with your post in an unmarked grave.

      Good god man, don't give the marketing droids any ideas. They're bad enough as it is.

    86. Re:Agree 100% by Kyusaku+Natsume · · Score: 1

      Apple does not design CPU

      Aside their collaboration with IBM and Motorola for the development of PowerPC; from the development of A4, A5, A6 series CPU's, they don't design CPU's, they never had.*

      *sarcasm

      --
      Mexico: 100% conservative's America now!
  3. Amen! by mschaffer · · Score: 3, Funny

    Go Linus!

    1. Re:Amen! by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      Ok but...
      More resolution -> more computing to render frames -> more battery drainage.

      Or maybe people will learn to switch res to save battery.

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
    2. Re:Amen! by partyguerrilla · · Score: 1

      The difference should be nominal, at least compared to the hard drives, mobile GPU and so on.

    3. Re:Amen! by CadentOrange · · Score: 4, Informative

      You get 6 - 7 hours battery life on the 15" retina Macbook Pro. Power consumption of these screens is fine.

    4. Re:Amen! by xystren · · Score: 1

      I completely agree. I have been complaining about small laptop screens resolutions for years... Have talked to many hardware manufactures over the years only to have things fall on deaf ears. Hopefully Linus has enough clout that manufactures will actually listen.

    5. Re:Amen! by marcello_dl · · Score: 1

      I wasn't thinking about the power consumption of the screen itself, but about the cpu and gpu power needed to drive it. But those with a pb retina can easily try adopting a smaller screen size gaming a little and see what difference it makes.

      --
      ---- MISSING MISCELLANEOUS DATA SEGMENT --- [sigdash] trolololol
  4. While you're at it... by PhrostyMcByte · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How about 4K standard desktop resolution for 22" monitors? All this DPI fighting needs to leak over into desktops eventually.

    1. Re:While you're at it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How about 4K standard desktop resolution for 22" monitors? All this DPI fighting needs to leak over into desktops eventually.

      Can your average onboard video card drive monitors at that resolution?

    2. Re:While you're at it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      How about 4K standard desktop resolution for 22" monitors? All this DPI fighting needs to leak over into desktops eventually.

      It's called the IBM T221, with a 3840 x 2400 resolution, 22" size and it's been around since 2001, although the $5,000+ price when new put some people off ($600 to $900 on a certain auction site). Sharp currently makes a 3840 x 2160 panel (no electronics) for around the same price in sample quantities. Remember, if each pixel has 3 transistors (one per color) you're looking at 27.6 MILLION PARTS per panel, right now that means a lot of defects and a large price to cover the costs.

    3. Re:While you're at it... by maxwell+demon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you can afford such a monitor, you also can afford a separate graphics card.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    4. Re:While you're at it... by beelsebob · · Score: 5, Informative

      It's a shame you've been modded down. The answer is no, unfortunately. More so, there's also no current display cable standard capable of transmitting the resolutions needed for desktop monitors to be doubled up.

      A few of examples:
      The Intel HD {2000 | 2500 | 3000 | 4000} you'll find on pretty much all intel CPUs of late, and hence in 90% of desktop computers sold just now has a maximum framebuffer and texture size of 4096x4096. The road map for haswell and broadwell does not indicate this increasing. So for 27" monitors, where you'd want at least 5120x2880, that's simply not good enough.

      Similarly, HDMI maxes out currently at 2560x1600, DVI at the same, and even Display Port at 3840x2160, so again – not good enough.

    5. Re:While you're at it... by asc99c · · Score: 1

      That's what gets me down. It's nearly 6 years now since I bought my 2560x1600 30" monitor and nothing has moved, except the price for what I already have has gone up about 40%.

      I'm pretty sure Apple has comprehensively shown people are willing to pay a premium for a decent screen, I just don't understand why this one area has stood still for a whole decade. I'd happily pay £1000 for a 4K monitor (well happily except for begrudging the fact such a thing hasn't been available for years already!)

    6. Re:While you're at it... by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      Can your average onboard video card drive monitors at that resolution?

      Yes, without any difficulty. It's 2012. Unless you want to play 3D games - in that case, just drop down to a lower resolution to play your game fullscreen, and go back to normal res when you exit.

      Obsessive 'gamers' who want to play the latest titles at maximum resolution and maximum refresh are very much in the minority, and they have always tended to buy separate video cards anyway.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    7. Re:While you're at it... by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      I should clarify - the GPU is certainly capable of rendering a 4000-by-4000 frame buffer, it's still only a hundred megs or so of memory. Sending those pixels to the monitor may require something beefier than a standard DVI link. Even dual-link DVI is not enough for high resolutions at a decent refresh rate. The new Displayport 2.0 standard has four times the bandwidth of DVI, which is getting there. So what's needed is for onboard graphics to move to Displayport 2.0 outputs; but the GPUs are already fast enough, if you're talking about text-based uses, static images like photo editing, or relatively low-resolution video like playing DVDs or Youtube.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    8. Re:While you're at it... by Ed+Avis · · Score: 2

      I drive a T221 at 3840x2400 resolution over dual-link DVI - but it has to be at a reduced refresh rate of 24Hz. (Actually I have two monitors with this setup, each in portrait rotation, so the total desktop is 4800x3840.)

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    9. Re:While you're at it... by darkain · · Score: 1

      27 million transistors? So, basically, on-par with 1999 technology then. (if that is your only measurement metrics)

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transistor_count

    10. Re:While you're at it... by KingMotley · · Score: 1

      It has the power to, yes.

      Running 3D games at that resolution with a reasonable framerate is a different question. Not everyone uses their desktops for just playing games, and I would love the extra resolution for business work. I'm pretty sure the video card *I* have could drive that resolution for the majority of games fairly easily too.

    11. Re:While you're at it... by KingMotley · · Score: 4, Informative

      3840x2160 *IS* what most people call 4k resolution. So I think you've answered your own question, just flip no to yes.

      Yes, there are many competing 4k resolutions, but 3840x2160 is the most common of them, being given the moniker "4k UHD".

    12. Re:While you're at it... by KingMotley · · Score: 1

      You do realize that 4k monitors have been around for over a decade, none of which were 84" that I know of, right?

      The IBM T221 for example has been around since 2001, and there are a lot of others.

    13. Re:While you're at it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Defects in silicon can be handled by adding extra redundant logic on the chip that can be rerouted by burning some fuses or even through configuration pins.

      Display is different. When there is a defect in the middle of the screen, you cannot just tell the user to look at the extra redundant pixels that you added on the side of the screen and call it a day.

      Also the surface area of a display is at least two magnitudes higher than silicon chips.

    14. Re:While you're at it... by JDG1980 · · Score: 2

      Can your average onboard video card drive monitors at that resolution?

      Most of the silicon supports it, even if the connections might not. Intel's Ivy Bridge supports 4K output, but this requires dual-DisplayPort. Haswell will support it through a single port.

      The early adopters for 4K will probably be using at least midrange graphics cards, which do this resolution just fine (though of course the framerate on Crysis may be less than stellar). By the time the monitors are widely available, standard integrated graphics should be able to support it.

    15. Re:While you're at it... by JDG1980 · · Score: 2

      The problem with the T221 is that it has a very low refresh rate (so you can't play most video games on it, even older 2D stuff in emulators). Having to use multiple connections and having to buy used monitors off of eBay will also be a deterrent to many buyers. I'd like to try one but I am not sure I'd feel comfortable shelling out $600-$900 for a business-used monitor that in some cases has screen burn-in (according to the descriptions). We need to get smaller and much cheaper 4K TVs in the mass market, then we can use those as monitors.

    16. Re:While you're at it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      24hz is barbaric. This is not good enough for watching Youtube let alone playing games.

    17. Re:While you're at it... by vyvepe · · Score: 1

      3840x2160, 30bpp, 60fps will use about 15Gbit/s, Display Port bandwidth is 17.28 Gbit/s. So there is still some room. You can also use different color encoding (like YCbCr 4:2:2 chroma sub sampling) to lower bandwidth. Lowering color channel bandwidth to 16 bpp (8bit luma 8bit chroma) would be barely noticeable for such a high density display. Our non-existing 4096x4096, 16bpp, 60fps display would use about 16 Gbit/s. So Display Port is barely OK. And you can still lower the refresh rate :)

    18. Re:While you're at it... by robi5 · · Score: 1

      > you're looking at 27.6 MILLION PARTS per panel, right now that means a lot of defects

      At a sufficiently high pixel density (maybe a couple of thousand DPI), having a large number of bad pixels is OK as long as they are spread around evenly.

    19. Re:While you're at it... by Randle_Revar · · Score: 1

      Dunno what the average onboard gpu is, but new Intels can (Ivy Bridge (w/ software update)). Since AMD is using Radeon tech, it shouldn't be an issue for them either, though I haven't heard anything.

      It would take a while for the new monitors to come in anyway, so just the newer stuff supporting it should be fine.

    20. Re:While you're at it... by Randle_Revar · · Score: 1

      I don't know or care about the others, but Display Port 1.2 handles 4k.
      As I said in my other comment, Ivy Bridge can physically drive 4k, it just needs a driver update, which Intel is supposed to do soon I think.

    21. Re:While you're at it... by non0score · · Score: 1

      Detractors made similar claims when people wanted 2560x1600. Look where we're at now....

    22. Re:While you're at it... by shellbeach · · Score: 2

      Guess you don't go to the cinema much if you think 24hz is barbaric... but then, why would you, with all those high quality youtube features to watch?

    23. Re:While you're at it... by Ironhandx · · Score: 1

      It won't. DVI can handle that just fine.

      SVGA/XVGA could handle that just fine. Different transmit method but who fucking cares? It had the same quality, better in some cases. If it takes a swapping backwards a few years in connector tech to go forwards then something is seriously wrong.

      There is no real need for new monitor connectors, and hasn't been for a long long time.

      Dual-Link DVI will do almost double that resolution currently and they're not really pushing it at the moment.

    24. Re:While you're at it... by KingMotley · · Score: 4, Informative

      Not sure what you were trying to say. Yes, people often assume 4k means vertical resolution, when it usually refers to horizontal. I believe I've said that.

      Other than you restating the obvious, as I said before, 3840x2160 is the most prevalent 4k resolution, not the 4096x3072 you gave. 4k by 3k would be an aspect ratio of 4:3, where 3840x2160 is 16:9. The ITU, which typically sets the standards approved 3840x2160 as well. The first 4k LCD tv, is also 3840x2160. I've never heard of any device that does 4096x3072 so I have no idea why you think that is the reference resolution. There ARE some 4096x2160, but I suspect those will disappear in time as well.

    25. Re:While you're at it... by Kjella · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Intel has shown Ivy Bridge running 4K over two DP cables. Video acceleration also works. Haswell has been promised to do 4K over one cable, I hope 3840x2160x60 fps over DisplayPort and not just 3840x2160x24 fps over HDMI 1.4 or maybe HDMI 2.0 will show up - but we'll know in half a year or so. Here's a clip of Haswell decoding a 200 Mbps 4K video stream in hardware, 1% CPU. So by this time next year, mainstream CPUs will be able to do it. Meanwhile people have tested it for gaming, top end cards in CF/SLI will give you okay frame rates. It is also rumored that the PS4 will support 4K video output - not unlikely since Sony also sells 4K TVs now - with that not being said that games will be in 4K resolution, just like the PS3 plays 720p games and outputs 1080p BluRay.

      The huge elephant in the closet is of course still the cost of 4K displays. The "Retina" screens add a hefty premium to the 13-15" MBPs, I suspect for a >20 inch 4K monitor you are looking at least $1000 extra, even if Apple plans to make up for it on volume. Remember current 4K monitors are way over $10k, though they're only for special use in industry/medical/military which of course means a huge sticker price. That said, no doubt a $34,999 Eizo monitor is overpriced when you can get LGs 84" 4K TV for $16,999 but still it's a good stretch down to normal consumer prices.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    26. Re:While you're at it... by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Probably true. Graphics cards are amazingly expensive, and power hogs. I don't think you can even find a decent gaming card that does not require an auxillary power connector.

      I think what's needed is a way to take have higher resolution for static pictures, then for games or streaming movies you use 1/4 the resolution and let the monitor's hardware duplicate the pixels for you. And no, you do NOT want streaming movies at that ridiculous resolution.

    27. Re:While you're at it... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      When I got my 240GT the 250GTS was the top dog. The 240GT is 3/4 as fast for 1/2 the power budget, and runs entirely off the PCI-E bus. I don't know about today, but if not, it hasn't been that long. My 240GT still seems to run games, but it would shit itself at that resolution.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    28. Re:While you're at it... by T.+Bombadil · · Score: 1

      The real reason is that Apple's OS is not only better at handling the higher DPI but looks BETTER the higher it goes and at the same time, Microsoft's OS looks worse the more you try to scale it to a high DPI system.

      Microsoft actually created their own fonts(think Arial) and rendering system for the sole purpose of making them look crisp on a low resolution display but at the same time they have painted themselves into a corner. They would have to change their GDI APIs to adopt a more Applish system and that would cause a whole slew of software compatibility issues. It's a chicken or the egg style problem.

      See: http://www.joelonsoftware.com/items/2007/06/12.html

      --
      -- If you cast your bread on the water, sometimes it comes back angel food cake.
    29. Re:While you're at it... by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1

      Intel's Thunderbolt is at 10 Gb data rate per device (up to 20 total). Apple laptops now come with Thunderbolt as standard and its also making its way into high-end PC motherboards. You can drive pretty good screens that those rates.

      Intel are pretty smart. They pretty much own both horses in the new interface standards race: USB3 and Thunderbolt.

    30. Re:While you're at it... by Vegemeister · · Score: 2

      Yes, most commercial movies are shot at 24 Hz, and yes, it's still barbaric.

    31. Re:While you're at it... by unitron · · Score: 1

      But projectors have a shutter system that flashes each frame on the screen twice (or interrupts each frame halfway through its time on screen), so it appears to be 48 frames per second.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    32. Re:While you're at it... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The "Retina" screens add a hefty premium to the 13-15" MBPs

      But the "better than Retina" screen in the Nexus 10 doesn't. It is actually very cheap for a high end 10" tablet. So the conclusion must be that the large Retina display price premium is just Apple's profit margin, not inherent to the technology.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    33. Re:While you're at it... by beelsebob · · Score: 1

      The limitation of the graphics card to 4096x4096 is not to do with bandwidth, it's simply the maximum size of framebuffer it supports addressing unique pixels within. You can not have a framebuffer wider than 4096, and you cannot have one taller than 4096.

    34. Re:While you're at it... by bemymonkey · · Score: 1

      Of course. Ivy Bridge's onboard graphics added support for 4K, IIRC, so anyone with a halfway modern PC should be good to go, even without a dedicated graphics card...

    35. Re:While you're at it... by Mattsson · · Score: 1

      UHDTV 4K is 3840x2160 (Which really should be called 2160p, if we are to follow the name convention of HDTV)
      UHDTV 8K is 7680x4320

      So a regular Display Port 1.4 port can indeed drive a 4K monitor.
      But, as you say, it can not drive higher resolutions today.

      It would be possible to use the same method that IBM used for their T220 and T221 monitors though.
      There was no connector that could drive the 3840x2400 resolution in 2001, so they used up to four single link DVI-connectors, sending part of the screen on each connector.
      This, of course, needed special driver support. But the same thing could be done with Display Port.
      Use 4 of them to run a 7680x4320 display.

      --
      /.Mattsson - My native language is not English, so please don't whine over linguistic errors. (That's lame anyway...)
    36. Re:While you're at it... by asc99c · · Score: 1

      Up to about 150dpi, I'd prefer just using the resolution for more 'space'. Certainly on a 30" monitor, I think 4K resolution would look fine without the DPI scaling. I'm writing this reply from a Vaio P-series with an 8" 1600x768 screen, and again I don't use DPI scaling on this one either, however I'm also about half the distance from the screen than I would be on my desktop monitor.

      Most new programs seem to scale reasonably well. But windows strong point was always backwards compatibility. A lot of old stuff does still work in Vista / 7 but doesn't really deal with scaling properly. I think if people started buying higher res screens, application developers would fix the remaining problems.

    37. Re:While you're at it... by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      I think it's 3x FWIW. But in any case, isn't the frame rate for LCD more of an "update" rate than "flicker" rate? With CRTs, they're the same thing, I thought (but may be wrong) that LCDs stay unchanged until updated, with the flicker rate of an unchanging screen being whatever the backlight's flicker rate is.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    38. Re:While you're at it... by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1
      Nope, DVI won't cope with 4000x4000 resolution at any refresh rate you'd want to use. The bandwidth on a DVI link is relatively limited. From Wikipedia:

      The DVI specification mandates a maximum pixel clock frequency of 165 MHz when running in single-link mode. With a single DVI link, the highest supported standard resolution is 2.75 megapixels (including blanking interval) at 60 Hz refresh.

      Dual-link DVI is twice the bandwidth but that is still not nearly enough for a 4k*4k display at 60Hz.

      I have first-hand experience of this driving T221 monitors (which are less than ten megapixels). Over a dual-link DVI connection only about 30Hz refresh is possible, even if you overclock the DVI link beyond the spec.

      As for analogue VGA connectors, there is no defined limit, but basic signal processing laws limit the pixels you can push down the wire. In practice, even with a very short 0.5 metre cable of the highest quality I could find, the picture quality at a mere 1920x1080 resolution is noticeably worse with analogue cabling than with DVI. That might be due to the A-to-D converter in the monitor rather than to a limitation of the cable or graphics card, but making A-to-D converters capable of handling this large bandwidth, together with the higher-spec cabling required, would be very expensive. Much more so than using a digital interface such as Displayport 2.0.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    39. Re:While you're at it... by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      Sorry I meant Displayport 1.2 not "2.0".

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    40. Re:While you're at it... by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      I don't watch movies or play games on my work PC, so 24Hz is fine.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    41. Re:While you're at it... by Ironhandx · · Score: 1

      Gah, brain keeps reading this 4k x 4k as 4k.... as in 3840x2160. Since I have a TV upstairs being driven through a single link DVI port for that that... idk what wikipedia is on about.

      Beyond that I have a 19" Phillips CRT that has a native resolution of 2560x1920(5mp) and VGA cables do that with crisper picture than I can get from even some of the best LCD's today, so the A to D converter is the problem. I've heard of much larger resolution screens as well, and I believe I saw one in a hopsital once but I never did get to verify that :(

      From what I understand of LCD a A to D converter shouldn't even be necessary, they should be able to make analogue LCD displays. In fact they have made them for hospitals 30+ years ago. As I mentioned, no new connector tech has been /needed/ for quite some time. I think the only reason its been pushed is it gives the display manufacturers more ability to do some post-processing on it after its transmitted.

    42. Re:While you're at it... by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      That is the key there are gaming cards which can drive the 2560x1600 resolutions and deliver good framer rates. these are the same cards gamers are buying now days anyways so nothing changes for them. Then there are the ~$50 (1GB NVIDIA GeForce GT610 for example) cards that will not have any problem doing those resolutions and driving 2 monitors but would be worthless for gaming but would meet my needs and probably most non gamers needs. These cards also don't seem to require the auxiliary power connection

      --
      Time to offend someone
    43. Re:While you're at it... by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      You have a 3840x2160 television? Wow. And the pictures you are displaying on it are that resolution too - not just normal HDTV 1920x1080?

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    44. Re:While you're at it... by Ironhandx · · Score: 1

      Yes. Its connected to my gaming computer at the moment. Anything I throw at it through the xbox etc is of course topping out at 1920x1080.

      Dragon Age Origins looks fantastic in that resolution with the HD res mod :)

    45. Re:While you're at it... by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      That's really interesting - so you can get a 3840x2160 desktop on it, at 60Hz refresh, with only a single-link DVI connection. Can you share some more details about your setup?

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    46. Re:While you're at it... by Ironhandx · · Score: 1

      What parts did you want? The only other relevant bit I can think of is that there are a pair of Asus HD7970s driving it.

      They get some tearing now and then on some games with the crossfire but they're quite nice.

      3 monitors is great for some games too but for the most part I hate the bezels.

    47. Re:While you're at it... by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      I was wondering what the model of the 3840x2160 display is.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    48. Re:While you're at it... by Ironhandx · · Score: 1

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3bDiJIcysBs

      The 55" one thats on display there. Oddly enough it comes with an English display option for the menus.

    49. Re:While you're at it... by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      According to Wikipedia that display, the Toshiba Regza 55X3 or 55ZL2G, is driven by four HDMI inputs. Are you really getting a 3840x2160 desktop just using one of them?

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    50. Re:While you're at it... by Ironhandx · · Score: 1

      Both of those are 3D tvs, this one is 2d only, that probably makes some sort of difference. I'm looking for the one I have right now but it was hard enough to find in the first place. They still only sell them in Japan afaik.

      Its hooked up right now on DVI-> HDMI with one of those simple converters and I've got a logitech surround sound system hooked up to the fibre out on the sound card. Tried straight HDMI but that didn't want to work well for some reason.

    51. Re:While you're at it... by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      Cool. I have monitors with a similar resolution but only 22 inches - so I have to set the font size to extra large in every application. I imagine that you can keep fonts at 'normal' size and just have a super huge desktop. Here's a photo of my setup: http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7145/6851350945_e582af1ed5_o.jpg (it's a big image but I guess you will have no problem displaying it!) Do you have a photo of yours?

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    52. Re:While you're at it... by Ironhandx · · Score: 1

      Not on hand. I'll try to remember to grab one later. My space isn't nearly as clean as yours though, haha.

      Also, you CAN do that with keeping fonts at a normal size but the thing is across the room so I still set it to large. Additionally due to the fact that the TV is over 4x the size of a 24" monitor the pixels are over 4x the size and smaller fonts look a tiny bit digitized, even though the resolution is huge. It went away a bit when I upgraded from 1080p so I could drop it down from the 200% size I was using but now its set to 125%.

      2.75 MP on DVI on wikipedia is VERY patently wrong though. You can drive 2560x1440 on many new monitors over straight DVI and that alone is 3.6 MP.

      I mean, the theoretical transport capacity of a DVI cable with just a sender/receiver processing upgrade is stupidly high. I'd much rather see them go to DVI-2.0 or some such if necessary. Would be ridiculously easy to make backwards compatible in both directions so that the DVI-2.0 only works if both ends have it.

      They(being media companies) don't want that though because DVI is inherently an unencrypted tech and the whole drive behind HDMI and DisplayPort is actually HDCP and similar technologies. It has and had nothing at all to do with the actual technology. HDMI is literally DVI made small with an extra channel to handle DRM negotiations.

    53. Re:While you're at it... by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      I wonder, Wikipedia isn't usually wrong on this stuff (and with T221 monitors the DVI bandwidth restrictions are all too real) but you have a clear counterexample. But if there is no problem driving 2560x1440 over plain DVI, why was dual link DVI invented? Hardware manufacturers wouldn't spend the money to provide the extra pins if they didn't do anything. There must be something we are missing.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    54. Re:While you're at it... by Ironhandx · · Score: 1

      Dual Link DVI was invented at the advent of 3D monitors I believe... I'm beginning to wonder if thats not the trick here. From what I understand after reading a few quick articles the way this 3d works ends up transmitting more than twice as much data to the display.

      The T220/221 I have no clue as to why there would be bandwidth restrictions... Though sometimes companies will simply install a common solution on new lines of products even where its not required simply to reduce cost on all product lines. The cost of dual link DVI should be something close to double the cost of single-DVI and the cost of the processors tossed into most monitors for post processing these days would be more than the cost of the DVI controller upgrade... so the cost of installing dual link would be negligible if they have a 3d monitor built on the same chassis.

    55. Re:While you're at it... by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      Also, you should know that your claims about driving 3840x2160 are a bit misleading. You may be able to do it over a single HDMI link, but you're not getting full 60 Hz progressive refresh. HDMI doesn't have enough bandwidth to support that. You're probably dropping down to ~30 or even ~15 Hz refresh.

      That's what I suspected too. Usually there is an on-screen display which shows you the refresh rate you're using.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    56. Re:While you're at it... by shellbeach · · Score: 1

      Interestingly, the push for 48 Hz doesn't seem to be going too well -- turns out people like the 24 fps look.

      Personally I'm with the majority here and hate the high-fps "video camera" effect. 24fps 70mm film ftw ... :)

    57. Re:While you're at it... by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      The 4k display.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  5. Bring back 4:3 aspect ratio+full-layout keyboards by JoeyRox · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Along with higher resolution.

  6. Re:Problem by WilyCoder · · Score: 3, Funny

    ^^^ Score -1, completely fucking wrong.

  7. Damn it, Torvolds! by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I realize that this is a lost cause and all; but why would you endorse a 16:10(at least it's not bloody 16:9...) rather than a 4:3 for a laptop? For a tablet, sure, where you can change the orientation and turn your sprawling rectangle into a nice, readable, page-width reading surface; but a laptop, where the keyboard keeps you from doing that?

    If virtually all laptop displays are going to be laid out as though they are used for nothing but watching movies it would be nice if they at least threw in some additional pixels; but do we have to give up the shape that is better for dealing with text in a reasonably sized package? Absurdly wide desktop screens are fine, because you can just make them larger, and treat them as multiple page-sized screens when needed; but laptops have space constraints to deal with...

    1. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by oic0 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      if I hadn't already replied in this thread I would mod this up.

    2. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by LateArthurDent · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I realize that this is a lost cause and all; but why would you endorse a 16:10(at least it's not bloody 16:9...) rather than a 4:3 for a laptop? For a tablet, sure, where you can change the orientation and turn your sprawling rectangle into a nice, readable, page-width reading surface; but a laptop, where the keyboard keeps you from doing that?

      Because standardized aspect ratios are generally a good thing (I would actually rather do the 16:9, but 16:10 is close enough). In addition, because I don't have dual monitors on my laptop, I like to be able to put two windows side-by-side, each taking up half the screen. Also, wider screens means wider laptop, which means wider keyboard.

      I understand your complaint, and for the desktop, I like the ability to turn my monitor to portrait orientation. That said, there are a good many reasons for having widescreen laptops.

    3. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by neminem · · Score: 1

      Having used both quite a lot, I actually prefer 16:10 to 4:3 on laptops. In fact, the first time I got a 16:10 laptop, back when 4:3 was still fairly common, the first day I used it I decided I was never going back. Not that I have a choice anymore... I grabbed one of the last 16:10 laptops still on the market at the time (it's not anymore :(), now I have to hope it'll last forever, or at least until at least one laptop manufacturer realizes that it would make sense to give consumers choice again. (I'd love it if 4:3 screens were available, too, for people who love it the way I love 16:10; I just wouldn't buy them myself.)

    4. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by beelsebob · · Score: 2

      Very simple – because I have a code editor that's not retarded, and doesn't require me to display only one column of text. Instead, I can have 2 or 3 documents open side by side, each showing 3-4 methods at once, on one 16:10, 2560x1600 panel.

    5. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by Desler · · Score: 1

      Absurdly wide desktop screens are fine, because you can just make them larger, and treat them as multiple page-sized screens when needed; but laptops have space constraints to deal with...

      So if you're concerned about space constraints you realize that while a 4:3 screen saves about 6% in width it is also nearly 13% taller, right? You are basically just adding space in another direction and not really saving anything.

    6. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by QuasiSteve · · Score: 1

      But then why not argue in favor of 5:4? 4:3 is just an old TV aspect ratio that became popular for monitors for the same reasons as 16:9 is popular on LCDs now. 5:4 was actually quite nice for browsing the web, editing code, etc.

      If you want to strike a compromise between 4:3 (12:9) and 16:9, why not argue for 14:9?
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/14:9

    7. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by gman003 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I prefer 16:10 monitors to 4:3 (old-school) or 16:9 ("widescreen HD modern crap").

      4:3 works fine for a single-window app, but it's hard to do two side-by-side windows. Even some fullscreen apps don't work well with it. I prefer my text editors to have a lot of horizontal space for text - I threw the 80 columns rule out a decade ago.

      Meanwhile, 16:9 is a bit condensed for productivity stuff. For movies and games, 16:9 works fine. But so does 16:10. Movies you can just blackbar, and games look fine on 16:10.

      So I find 16:10 to be a good compromise for aspect ratio. It's wide enough to do widescreen movies and side-by-side windows, but not so wide that a fullscreen editor feels stretched. I currently put up with 16:9, since 1920x1080 is about half the cost of 1920x1200, but my ideal setup would be 16:10.

      Also, for the mathematically inclined, 16:10 is a close approximation of the golden ratio.

    8. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by mark-t · · Score: 2

      16:10 is nice to have for computer monitors that might be used to watch video, because it allows space at the bottom or top of the screen for user interface controls that don't actually overlap the video.

    9. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by fph+il+quozientatore · · Score: 1

      If anyone argues for maximum surface area per diagonal, why not 1:1?

      Manufacturers don't want maximum area per diagonal, they want minimum. That way they can make a smaller screen and still sell it as a 15''.

      --
      My first program:

      Hell Segmentation fault

    10. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      I use a 19" 1280 x 1024 on my PC (don't have a laptop), and will never buy a widescreen display

      Why because you have some irrational issue with them? How could 1920x1080 not be better for example? Its more vertical lines than you have today, and more horizontal. You could display a 1280x1024 image on it just by not using the entire thing!

      I can see why you might prefer 1920x1440 or something if you could get it, but clinging to 1280x1024 just makes no sense.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    11. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      Because standardized aspect ratios are generally a good thing.

      Why? Other than watching videos, aspect aspect ratio should never be worried about when designing software or content.

    12. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Linus is a pragmatist first and foremost. He sees that a 16:10 display at this resolution is available, and it's good enough (even if 4:3 would be better still), and so he called it out.

    13. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by LateArthurDent · · Score: 2

      Because standardized aspect ratios are generally a good thing.

      Why? Other than watching videos, aspect aspect ratio should never be worried about when designing software or content.

      For one it makes for cheaper screens, if the fabs are just creating them the same across all devices.

    14. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by Seumas · · Score: 1

      Why wouldn't 16:10 be advocated? It's more real-estate. Why would you want to pay just as much money for the 16:9 monitors you're forced to buy today (because they're about 95% of the market) than for the 16:10 you bought half a dozen years ago? Part of the reason I still haven't replaced my 30" ACDs is that it's getting very difficult to find a high quality monitor these days that is not 16:9 and that isn't a mere 27". It's like we're going fucking backwards

      And as to the reason we have for wider than taller or square (as some people seem to be wanting) is that it's a hell of a lot easier for me to move my head left and right on a 30" display in front of me than to move it up and down the same distance over great periods of time.

      Advocating for 16:9 "because that's what movies and television use" is just . . . kind of pointless. I'm not writing code, surfing the net, or playing strategy games on my television.

    15. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by teotwawki42 · · Score: 1

      4 years ago I would have agreed with you whole-heartedly! I loved my Toshiba Portege with a 12" 1400x1050 screen. It had high pixel density(140PPI) and a 4:3 aspect ratio. However, with the ability to snap a window to half of a screen in a lot of modern window managers widescreen is not so bad as long as you have a greater that 1000 pixel vertical resolution. I find myself using virtual workspaces much less than I used to because of this. In light of this I am more disturbed by the stagnation of pixel density advancements than the prevalence of widescreens on laptops. I mean... We now call 768 vertical pixels HD no matter how big the screen. How is that high definition on a 15" laptop? Especially when the taskbar, menu bar, status bar, etc take up 30 pixels each!

    16. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by RulerOf · · Score: 2

      Because standardized aspect ratios are generally a good thing.

      Why? Other than watching videos, aspect aspect ratio should never be worried about when designing software or content.

      For one it makes for cheaper screens, if the fabs are just creating them the same across all devices.

      But that's exactly the logic that's gotten us into the steaming pile of shit that is the selection from which we have to choose today when purchasing a laptop!

      Not that you're wrong, but they say history repeats itself.

      --
      Boot Windows, Linux, and ESX over the network for free.
    17. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by Richard_J_N · · Score: 1

      Exactly. I've got 2048x1535 on my 15" T60p (upgraded with a new-old-stock panel that was manufactured in 2002!) and this is pretty amazing.
      Part of the problem is the "widescreen" misnomer: "shortscreen" would be more accurate (given that an x-inch widescreen has less area than an x-inch 4:3).

    18. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by White+Flame · · Score: 1

      All movies are 16:9.

      The vast majority of movies (ie, theatrical releases) are much wider than 16:9.

      (I don't know why 16:10 is being advocated),
      but 4:3, that really does not make any sense.

      Because people spend far more computer time on their Facebooks and other vertical-content document/page-oriented tasks vs watch movies.

    19. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by kcitren · · Score: 1

      Huh? For a rectangular shape, area per diagonal is the same no matter what the ratio.

    20. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      but why would you endorse a 16:10(at least it's not bloody 16:9...) rather than a 4:3 for a laptop?

      I can't speak for Torvalds however some of us actually like our 16:10 displays. Personally I think they are great. It's a perfect balance between a screen designed for editing one word document at a time, and a screen designed for multitasking. A few things I REALLY like about 16:10:

      • The ability to use two word documents side by side (I say use, not edit. It's a bit too much of an eyestrain if you constantly run two documents but occasionally it's great)
      • Smaller information windows on sides. Things like running Lync, or reading an Office help document which take up a fraction of the side of the screen
      • Being able to view long lines of code, or code with excessive indenting without wordwrap, not a problem if you're a neat coder, but it is a problem reading other's garbage
      • Excel, spreadsheets are getting wider in my experience so it's great not to have to horizontally scroll
      • Decent sized laptops. I actually really like the size of the modern laptop. Great sized keyboard without being this big hunking almost square that struggles to fit into a small backpack.
      • But each to their own. I'd like to see a return of 4:3 displays for dual monitor use, but personally if I had one screen 16:10 is the choice for me.

    21. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      There are more design constraints in a laptop than just the screen size. 16:(10ish) and other "wide" formats happen to match up very nicely with some of the other constraints, which include:

      1) laptop must include a keyboard which is actually useful for typing on
      2) laptop may include a pointing device
      3) laptop must minimize bulk and weight

      It happens that a keyboard has a very wide aspect ratio, such that even when you add an oversized multitouch trackpad underneath, the whole setup still has a wide aspect.

      Wide aspect ratios are a good compromise for maximizing the use of space, they allow the screen to match the footprint of the base. Demanding a 4:3 screen would put constraints on the other parts, and you might get too short a keyboard, or a machine that was unnecessarily deep. For some classes of machines, this isn't a big deal, for a 13" or 15" knapsack notebook, it's not ideal.

      And most people probably do use their machines as entertainment devices almost as much as they do actual work on them. Also, most people tend to be annoyed by letterboxing (and on an LCD monitor, letter boxing is kind of annoying - there just isn't enough contrast ratio to make the bars disappear). So the wide form factor is, in fact, a comfortable width.

      A problem is that many people who design software don't know how to operate windows. They make their application so that it demands 60% (or fullscreen sometimes...) of the screen to work correctly or just to not have annoying "features" like 2D scrolling.

      The slashdot designers are among those people - I would like to have /. in a column on a side of my screen, using no more than 25% of the width, and having newspaper-like narrow columns of text. Instead, If I don't stretch the window to cover way more than I care to (I want to use the rest of the screen for other things, without having to alt-tab to look at each of them), it gets an annoying horizontal scroll bar. Horizontal scrolling is an acceptable feature depending on the application, but only vertical-text languages should allow text to require horizontal scrolling - you have to scroll it at the end of every damn line otherwise.

      Worse, the width it requires is too many em's wide - the length of the lines is not appropriate for quickly acquiring the start of the next line after reaching the end of the current one, which slows down reading and comprehension.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    22. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by Maow · · Score: 1

      I like a 4:3 monitor myself, but I'm not sure how it would translate to a laptop.

      I'm thinking they'd make the keyboard more narrow so as to not expand the other dimension, or the laptop would become more square making most laptop bags useless. I'm already less than thrilled with laptop keyboards...

      But I do wish there were more desktop monitors at 4:3.

    23. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by OldTOP · · Score: 1

      It's nice to have a couple of large files open side by side sometimes. When I have a lot of windows open at the same time I prefer to have them side by side rather than stacked vertically. As long as I have enough vertical pixels, lots of horizontal pixels are nice too. At the moment I kind of like 16:10 because 1920:1200 is the widest screen I can get for a reasonable price with 1200 vertical pixels.

      --
      The universe was intelligently designed. Unfortunately God was in a hurry so he coded it in Java.
    24. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by Main+Gauche · · Score: 1

      I threw the 80 columns rule out a decade ago.

      Typesetters use fairly rigid rules about how many characters-wide text should be, in order to be easily readable. If you're filling a widescreen with one window of wrapped text, there is no way it is readable.

      Also, for the mathematically inclined, 16:10 is a close approximation of the golden ratio.

      That's pretty much the point: beauty before function.

    25. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by gman003 · · Score: 2

      I'm writing code. It's not so much the width of the actual line (although I do write some long lines), but the levels of indent. I quite often have to indent my code quite severely. I think 90% of my code is at least three levels of indent or greater, but relatively few of my lines contain more than 80 printing characters. And that one multi-thousand-character line DOESN'T COUNT. It doesn't.

      I have used all of the three common aspect ratios. I strongly prefer 16:10. 4:3 is only really good for one program on the monitor - maybe, with a stupid high resolution, you could do four, a 2x2 grid, but I don't think so. 16:10 and 16:9 let you treat it as two side-by-side 8:10 or 8:9 monitors (think 5:4 or 9:8 monitors in portrait). Trust me, I am not advocating this solely because it "looks good", but because it's highly functional.

    26. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by Yomers · · Score: 1

      I did the same and more, it's rare chance to DIY laptop. Also upgraded to T61 motherboard - mobo from 14'' non-widescreen T61 fits perfectly and gives an ability to put Pehryn C2D CPU, up 8 GB RAM and SATA II works with modified bios. Add ssd, extra hdd in ultabay if needed - and it's useful laptop! I can not say it's perfect tho - it's heavy, and a small touchpad as a legacy from 2006, and 2 hours of life on standard battery. But - a perfect keyboard, really good screen, and it's build like a tank to stand to my abuse. I used to buy new laptop 3 times a year - little spill on a keyboard - fried mobo, dropped from sofa - broken screen, and so on. Now I hope this one will last, I already tested spill-resistant keyboard :)

      I dream to see open standard for laptops - say standard for 15'' laptop, so any part made by that standard by any company would fit. Like you want to upgrade? Change motherboard. Want another keyboard? Change keyboard. For large laptops it would be not much harder than with desktops. But mainstream is going in opposite direction - cheap non-serviceble laptops that is by itself a replaceable part

    27. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by Yomers · · Score: 1

      Make most of loaptop bags useless?? OMFG thats a real reason they make only widescreen laptops now - we GOT to maintain compatibility with laptop bags!

      Keyboard is not a problem with 4:3 laptops 14'' and up, IBM proved it with their old Thinkpads.

    28. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by smash · · Score: 1

      Because you can use 2 windows side by side, which is useful on a laptop when you're on the move and don't have a second display next to you.

      Comparing things and writing things with a reference open is very common - whether it is a spreadsheet you're writing a report on, doing a diff between two source files, writing a piece of code on one side with the API reference on the other, etc.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    29. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Do you do what I do and set the tab spacing to 2 characters?

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    30. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by jkflying · · Score: 1

      No it isn't.
      If you have a 1" tall screen with a 15" diagonal it will only be ~15" wide, and have an area of ~15 inch^2
      If you have a 1:1 aspect ratio with a 15" diagonal then each side will be ~10" which gives you an area of a bit over 100 inch^2

      --
      Help I am stuck in a signature factory!
    31. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by imbaczek · · Score: 1

      bollocks. what's the difference between 2560x1600 and 2560x1920? please don't say you can't put two windows side by side on the latter.

    32. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by Arterion · · Score: 1

      1920 x 1200 was becoming common for widescreen computer monitors before 1080p television panels became the norm, then monitors went to that just because production was easier. 16:10 makes more sense a monitor, I think. I was using 1600x1200 on a CRT before I upgraded to a LCD, and now with 1920x1080, I have actually LOST over 10% of my vertical space. It's nice for watching movies or maybe gaming, but for reading long pages of text, the extra vertical pixels are really nice. I feel like 16:10 is a nice compromise. I've seen my laptop (16:9) against a friend's macbook (16:10), and the 16:10 looks ways more natural. My screen looks kinda squished.

      --
      "That which does not kill us makes us stranger." -Trevor Goodchild
    33. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      You are wrong (and the GP is more subtuly wrong).

      Firstly area per diagonal doesn't make sense if you are scaling a 2D shape the shape (including it's ratios and angles) the same then the area goes with the square of the diagonal. Double the length of a linear measurement and keep all length ratios and angles the same and you quadruple the area.

      Secondly the area to diagonal squared ratio of a rectangle does indeed depend on it's ratio as can easilly be shown with some simple algebra and geometry.

      Let A be the area, W be the width, H be the height, D be the diagonal and R be the ratio

      R=W/H
      A=W*H
      D^2=W^2+H^2

      A*R=W^2
      A/R=H^2

      D^2=A*R+A/R
      D^2=A*(R+1/R)

      A/D^2=1/(R+1/R)

      We can easilly see on a graph (and if we really want prove by differentiation to find turning points and then calculating a point in each range) that the area to diagonal squared ratio reaches a maxium when R=1.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    34. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by koxkoxkox · · Score: 1

      I think you should think about this again, a little bit harder this time ...

    35. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by N1AK · · Score: 1

      Fundamentally it is a size/shape issue. If you made the screen 4:3 and kept the same width you'd make the laptop considerably larger and if you cut the width to keep screen real estate the same then you'd have to shrink the keyboard width a lot. Personally I'd be happy if they could just get laptops up to a base standard of 1080px vertical. Sure it isn't perfect but the difference between 768 and 1080 is not just large numerically but night and day in normal use.

    36. Re:Damn it, Torvolds! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Further, a 16:10 17" has about the same height as a 4:3 15" with more pixels. For laptops this is very convenient.

  8. Re:Complainer by thesupraman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Apple doesnt have retina displays.

    Samsung, LG, and Sharp do.

    Apple packages/resells retina displays, developed by others.

    These are already available in cheap Chinese tablets, in the new android tablet, Linus has a good point.

  9. What about CRTs vs LCDs? by quietwalker · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It was years before LCDs even had something available in a store approaching the higher-res CRT monitors, much less at a reasonable price.

    Yet they phased all the CRTs out well before they had reached that point.

    Who makes decisions like this, and the re: the laptop resolutions? How can we make them ~rue~ those choices?

    1. Re:What about CRTs vs LCDs? by Obfuscant · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Who makes decisions like this, and the re: the laptop resolutions? How can we make them ~rue~ those choices?

      1. The people who think they have the right totell you that you are using too much energy and pass laws to stop you.

      2. We can't. They're too happy forcing you to be green to notice that you are unhappy being artificially technologically limited.

    2. Re:What about CRTs vs LCDs? by beelsebob · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Right, it was years before LCDs matched CRTs for their ability as laptop displays... wait.

    3. Re:What about CRTs vs LCDs? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Who makes decisions like this

      Customers and corporations, together. When most people buy widescreen HD-resolution displays, that's what's mostly going to be on the shelves. You've been able to get very high resolution LCDs for a long time, if you were willing to spend a stupendous amount of money. And CRTs didn't go away, you just had to order them. Retail stores exist to serve the masses.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    4. Re:What about CRTs vs LCDs? by zyzko · · Score: 1

      Size.

      The first from Google (21", 19,8" viewable, 2048x1536):

      http://bizsupport1.austin.hp.com/bc/docs/support/SupportManual/lpv07137/lpv07137.pdf

      Weight: 30.5kg.
      "30 minutes to reach optimum performance level".

      Size: Gigantic.

      Power consumption: 130W, not *that* bad when compared to living-room displays (but hey, sizes on them are not on 21" range) - a modern computer display (27", 2650x1440) from last year consumes 51,3 and the review calls it power hungry):

      http://reviews.cnet.com/lcd-monitors/samsung-syncmaster-s27a850d/4505-3174_7-35018743-2.html

      So yes, being able to move the display as an skinny nerd is a plus, not requiring a gigantic place is nice, and the power consumption...well, if you keep the monitor active 8 hours a day, take a calculator and see for yourself on your electricity prices how much a waste that CRT is.

      And yes, the good ones are still used professionally because they still deliver, but the cheap big CRTs were shait also on geometry - on low end you get garbage anyway in some aspects.

      -k

    5. Re:What about CRTs vs LCDs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      LCDs still suck. They just suck less then they used to. I want BLACK backgrounds, not grey. I want an excellent color gamut. You can get passable color gamut but you still can't get much above 1000:1 real contrast ratios. Those million to one ratios are full on to full off, where the monitor turns down the backlight on the black test. Do an ANSI checkerboard test and you're around 1000:1 on the very best ones.
      I don't mind the lack of deflection distortions though.

    6. Re:What about CRTs vs LCDs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It was, actually. See the Commodore SX-64, for example.

    7. Re:What about CRTs vs LCDs? by RocketRabbit · · Score: 1

      CRTs are bigger, heavier, more costly to ship, and have more expensive parts.

      LCDs are much lighter, the manufacturing and assembly process is easier, and once you have a manufacturing process in place it is far cheaper to produce an LCD per unit than a CRT. The CRT was the last mass-manufactured vacuum tube artifact in the world, aside from specialty products like guitar amps and audiophile equipment. The process for making tubes is expensive, environmentally filthy, and somewhat more dangerous than the LCD production process. They CRT is also far more fragile, and the parts have a more limited lifespan.

      LCDs also have significant advantages with their flat screens and better color consistency across the screen. They are also much, much easier on the eyes than a CRT.

      LCDs are superior in every single way that matters to the vast majority of consumers.

      If you still want a CRT, they are available and at heavily discounted prices compared to just a few years ago. Get one while you still can.

    8. Re:What about CRTs vs LCDs? by quax · · Score: 1

      You chose your username wisely. That's some really impressive obfuscation.

    9. Re:What about CRTs vs LCDs? by jo42 · · Score: 1

      Who makes decisions like this, and the re: the laptop resolutions?

      Sales, Marketing and Bean Counting Derptards.

    10. Re:What about CRTs vs LCDs? by Yomers · · Score: 1

      Hi-res panels were available from the beginning, like those http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_T220/T221_LCD_monitors , or QXGA 15'' thinkpad panels. But they were not mainstream and therefore expensive, and AFAIK there we no proper controls to change DPI in windows. Now hopefully it's going to change, thanks to Apple's innovative marketing department - hi-res panels are going mainstream!

    11. Re:What about CRTs vs LCDs? by beelsebob · · Score: 1

      I don't see a Comodore SX-64 on your lap ;)

    12. Re:What about CRTs vs LCDs? by buglista · · Score: 1

      Cite that law that killed CRTs, or fuck off. I think it was the free market - which you probably worship - flat panels got good enough and cheap enough that there wasn't enough demand for people to keep the high-end CRTs in stock.

  10. what about desktop monitors? by scharkalvin · · Score: 1

    Most desktop monitors have stopped short of the 2560x1600 standard as most computer monitors now use the same glass as HDTV. If laptops with 14-17" screens become standard at 2560x1600, then I'd expect my desktop 23" monitor to go to at least 5000x3000 or so.

  11. Re:Bring back 4:3 aspect ratio+full-layout keyboar by queazocotal · · Score: 1

    I have been holding off buying a new laptop.
    Give me a thinkpad (well, lenovo) with 4:3, 12-13", and 2048*1536, and I'm buying one tomorrow.
    Similarly a 23-24" 140dpi or so monitor

  12. Re:Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    You are completely nuts, and uninformed. 2560x1600 is the true pixel resolution of the iPad. It uses a SoC with a quad-core graphics chip to drive it. Current laptops could easily drive that resolution, except those using 5+ year-old tech.

    Even for applications that are just "blown up" with pixel doubling, additional smoothing can be applied, and it can still look better. Text is generally rendered directly through the system, and so you would get a true improvement in text in all applications. In fact, the additional resolution helps text readability far more than it helps anything else.

  13. Re:Bring back 4:3 aspect ratio+full-layout keyboar by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

    Along with higher resolution.

    +1 on the full keyboards!

    My kingdom for a damn 10-key...

    --
    An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
  14. Re:Problem by TummyX · · Score: 1

    Retina displays are the full actual resolution. For example, the Macbook Retina I'm typing on has a physical resolution of 2880x1800 and the GPU is physically rendering all those pixels. What you've just said actually makes no sense whatsoever. Multiplication of pixels in a 1:4 ratio of a smaller resolution? Making smaller resolutions just "blown up". WTF does that actually mean?

    You can run the retina display at native mode but everything will be half the size (physically) on the screen. The standard default mode for the retina display keeps all your elements the same "physical" size on your screen but renders them with four times the pixels (1:2 ratio) to increase the detail and crispness of text and images.

  15. Re:Problem by oic0 · · Score: 1

    If you think they would run many games at their current crap resolution now you are sorely mistaken. That aside, they might have to do what we did in the old days... reduce the game's resolution until its playable! When you start off with a decent resolution, downscaling doesn't look so bad.

  16. Re:Problem by Glock27 · · Score: 2

    I suggest you go pick up a low end laptop at about lets say 500 dollars. Hook it up to a display that can run 2560x1600 and tell me how it works out for you playing a game on the native resolution vs the 2560x1600

    Gaming versus using the laptop for lots of other pixel-intensive things is apples to oranges. Good 2D performance is much easier to achieve.

    Some examples of important, primarily 2D activities are web browsing, reading, and...software development. That last one just might interest Linux a bit. ;-)

    Aside from all that, you could always run your game at 1/2 resolution (1280x800) and be just as well off as with a crappy display.

    --
    Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
    Score: -1 100% Flamebait
  17. Re:Fonts by Desler · · Score: 2

    There's this thing called DPI scaling. Been around for ages.

  18. Re:Problem by Glock27 · · Score: 1

    Er, "interest Linus a bit" (sigh)

    --
    Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
    Score: -1 100% Flamebait
  19. Re:Problem by beelsebob · · Score: 1

    Uhh no, the retina display laptops very much do have 2560x1600 and 2880x1800 screens. They simply use UI scaling to make text readable, and buttons clickable. They are absolutely the resolution stated, they just use it for quality, not quantity of screen real estate.

  20. Re:Problem by etash · · Score: 2

    sure, you'd probably not be able to play the latest FPS on a laptop with a mobile gpu at playable frame rates at 2560*1600 resolution, BUT is that a serious argument for not having high resolution displays on laptops ? What's the percentage of people who buy laptops for the purpose of playing BF3 on them ? And just because there is a significant number of 17 people who wouldn't be able to play BF3 on their laptop at that resolution, laptops should not have that resolution ?

  21. Re:Problem by poetmatt · · Score: 1

    I dare you to even find a desktop that can handle 2560x1600 for modern games that doesn't cost you upwards of $2000 and I quadruple dare you to find one even for $3000 that can even reach 60fps consistently because they don't exist.

    However, putting higher resolution in just for display purposes, the laptops can handle it. Maybe not for gaming, but there are a lot of other uses for resolution.

  22. Amen! by sethmeisterg · · Score: 1

    Totally Agree. Mod Linus Up! Oh, he's in the real world, I forgot. Bummer.

  23. Re:Complainer by bloodhawk · · Score: 4, Informative

    Apple don't make display's, So no they have NOT produced displays better than anyone elses, they have simply rebadged displays made by the big manufacturers. There are only 3 or 4 large display manufacturers in the world that supply everyone.

  24. 1366x768 last century? by viperidaenz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wasn't its 1024x768 and 1280x1024 that were popular in the late 90's?

    1366x768 is the bastardised "720p HD Ready" TV panel. Its cheap and everyone produces them.

    I don't think its a coincidence that Samsung stopped producing high res panels for Apple just before a new range of high res Android devices were announced.
    Samsung and LG seem to be the only ones with the capability/capacity to do it in volume right now. Low res panels are cheap because everyone can do it.

    1. Re:1366x768 last century? by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      Why would 1366x768 be related to 720p. Isn't 720p 1280x720?

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    2. Re:1366x768 last century? by viperidaenz · · Score: 1

      It seems to be the resolution of all the LCD TV's that aren't 1920x1080. They even made 40"+ screens at 1366x768 with pixels over 1.5mm

    3. Re:1366x768 last century? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Actually Sharp as mass producing 4k panels and Panasonic are beginning to ramp up as well. I think the "retina" resolutions are just an intermediate stage on the way to standardizing at 4k and properly scalable UIs.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    4. Re:1366x768 last century? by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      Isn't 720p 1280x720?

      720p is 720 lines. If you have a system with square pixels and a 16:9 ratio that means you get 1280 pixels per line.

      However when you read the specs you find pretty much all HDTVs that are advertised as "HD ready 720p" have an native resoloution of 1366*768 in the specs.

      Why would 1366x768 be related to 720p.

      My guess is that by using 1366*768 panel manufacturers could produce a panel that was (barely) acceptable for both the monitor (must be above 1024*768 and have square pixels) and HDTV (must be widescreen and have at least 720 lines) markets. Then inertia made it stick arround to screen sizes that people wouldn't want to use as monitors at that resoloution.

      What is really annoying is that some HDTVs don't like to be fed with a 1366*768 input even though that is supposedly their native resoloution.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
  25. Re:Complainer by beelsebob · · Score: 1

    Uhhh, What makes you think that "retina" has anything to do with colour gamut? Apple uses IPS (in pane switching), LCD displays, which actually manage more colours, and better colour accuracy than a typical OLED display. What they don't manage is blacks as black as an OLED display, but they do manage whites much whiter (and a bunch of variants in between that OLED displays can't do).

    "Retina" displays only have to do with resolution –that is that they're high enough resolution for your eye not to be able to see the pixels at the typical usage distance.

  26. Vote with your wallet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Apple now offers you two laptops with that res and higher. Yet instead of praising what apple has done, he says "stop with the retina crap". How about advocating that Linux desktop developers make it so these resolutions are usable on laptop displays, as OS X and Windows 7 and 8 do? Have you seen what linux desktops look like on a MBPR? OS X has their method of scaling things properly, win7 in my opinion does a better job, Linux desktop environments simply don't do anything.

    1. Re:Vote with your wallet by Nerdfest · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Praising what Apple done ... do you mean the "building really nice hardware part" or the "doing all they can to destroy the notion of open personal computing part". It is nice hardware, but funding one also funds the other, unfortunately.

    2. Re:Vote with your wallet by Guy+Harris · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Apple now offers you two laptops with that res and higher. Yet instead of praising what apple has done, he says "stop with the retina crap".

      He's praising the hardware and condemning the marketing term Apple applies to it.

      Stop with the 'retina' crap, just call it 'reasonable resolution.'

      (emphasis mine).

    3. Re:Vote with your wallet by non0score · · Score: 1

      What open personal computing part? You mean I can't install Linux on RMBP? Or I can't install Windows? Which part?

      Oh, you mean the non-upgradability part? Given a self-contained unit that's thinner/lighter because of the lack of removable parts vs. one which is much heftier but has removable parts, I'd take the one that's thinner and lighter. After all, I don't see people complaining about non-upgradable motherboards on laptops, so why pick some arbitrary line and evaluate everything based on that?

    4. Re:Vote with your wallet by csumpi · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but no can do.

      I can buy 2 (two) Sony Vaios with better specs and 1920x1080 display for the price of the high res MacBook Pro. Faster processor, much better (and full) keyboard, better battery life, superior finish (my previous 2 year old vaio still looks brand new, having been used every day), and still a really nice IPS screen. The extra 20% of resolution is just not worth it.

      I can than take the extra $1000+ and pay for my daughter's violin classes for a year. I would be a total dick stealing that money from her, just to have a couple more pixels.

    5. Re:Vote with your wallet by Nerdfest · · Score: 2

      I mean the iOS part and the Mac marketplace, both locked to a single provider. Also the proprietary extension to open protocols (XMPP, ePub, SIP), and proprietary connectors.

    6. Re:Vote with your wallet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Calling it 'reasonable resolution' is functionally no different than 'retina'. Both are descriptions of a product, where one was proposed by Apple and the other by the benevolent Linus.

    7. Re:Vote with your wallet by RocketRabbit · · Score: 1

      If Apple wanted to destroy open personal computing, they would stop publishing the source code for their BSD codebase. They would stop funding LLVM, they would completely disable the ability to install software on OS X from sources other than their app store, etc.

      They have a phone and tablet line that is locked down, and that's the way that people like it. If you need to run your own software, you can, but it costs $99 for a developer license.

      If people didn't like Apple's phone and tablet scheme, they would vote with their dollars. Thing is, to most people, the phone and tablet are not things they want to spend time tinkering on. They are like a TV or a toaster - an appliance that you use, not something to tinker with.

      If anything, Google is a bigger threat, with their pervasive spying, their ad-model, and their other stunts like wardriving and collecting people's personal information at every step in the process that people go through when using the WWW.

    8. Re:Vote with your wallet by GeorgeWright · · Score: 1

      It seems to me that he's not so much condemning the marketing term Apple has applied to it, but rather condemning the fact that PC manufacturers are so far behind Apple in terms of screen resolution that Apple is /able/ to market it as some sort of superior display (in this case, a "Retina" display). Basically he's saying that it shouldn't be marketed as a high-end option called "Retina", but that it should be the norm for all laptops.

      --
      George Wright
    9. Re:Vote with your wallet by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      As an owner of a top-of-the line Sony Vaio VPCSE (I bought it for its full-HD resolution on 15" display) _and_ MacBook Pro - they are not comparable. MacBook is _much_ better - it has a faster CPU, it's much more quite and has a great battery life (I had to buy an external battery for my Vaio to get the same life). But yes, it MacBook costs about 1.5 times the price I paid for Vaio.

    10. Re:Vote with your wallet by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1

      Apple have high pixel densities, but their hardware is crippled by very little video ram (1 GB is not enough these days for serious 3D graphics work).

    11. Re:Vote with your wallet by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Linux seems to do better, at least X11 does since its able to automatically read the DPI of the attached display and size fonts etc appropriately..
      Of course that only works if the display actually reports its DPI correctly, which many do not because windows never bothers to read it.

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  27. Re:Complainer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Jesus, split those hairs a little more. Did Samsung, LG, and Sharp bother producing these displays before Apple dumped cash into their laps? No.

  28. Re:Complainer by Ed+Avis · · Score: 2

    Uh... where can I buy a 'cheap Chinese tablet' with a 15-inch 2800x1800 display?

    --
    -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
  29. There is high-res light at the end of the tunnel! by bertok · · Score: 4, Informative

    The problem with laptop and desktop LCDs, is that they adhere to the 1080p TV display spec, probably to shave cents of some controller somewhere, or to share a production line. Apparently it's vital that the hundreds of millions of computer displays made each year have everything in common with the non-existent 15" TV market, or whatever the fuck.

    Luckily, there's a lot of progress on making 4K resolution the new standard for video, which means that it should trickle "down" to computer displays. Despite the name, the new standard will have 3840 x 2160 resolution, but that is still notably higher than what Linus is asking for, providing 183 dpi even on a 24" display!

    If you can't wait, there's going to be affordable 4K TVs appearing soon with HDMI input. Just replace the monitor on you desk with a TV mounted on the wall behind your desk. You'll probably need a new video card, but the good thing is that most OS-es now hardware accelerate desktop composition, so the result should be silky smooth. You might even be able to get 120Hz going, but don't hold your breath: display connectors haven't caught up with the required bandwidth. Your 3D card might be able to generate a 48-bit 8.3 megapixel image at 120Hz, but that's almost 50 Gbps, and there is no PC video standard that will carry that.

    Next, the operating system vendors need to get their heads out of their asses and finish implementing proper multi-resolution support instead of the half-assed job they've been getting away with for decades because of the persistent assumption that higher-resolution = bigger-surface-area!

  30. Re:Complainer by Microlith · · Score: 2

    These are already available in cheap Chinese tablet

    Do tell!

    I hear all these amazing things about having the latest, high end hardware in the Cheap Chinese Tablets yet I can never find any that are more than GPL-violation propagating garbage.

  31. Put your money where your mouth is, and buy one. by guidryp · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You know what drives changes like this. People showing they will pay a premium to have it.

    By a 2880x1800 or 2560x1600 Retina Macbook, when they sell in numbers, competitors will follow.

    You know why there is a 2560x1600 Tablet. Because Apple sold shipping containers full of Retina iPads (2048x1536) and Google took notice and decided to one up them.

    Putting your money where your mouth is, trumps whining on a blog every time.

  32. Re:3840x2400 MINIMUM for desktop! by viperidaenz · · Score: 1

    Not even dual-link DVI can handle 3840x2400 at anything greater than 33Hz. at 60Hz, that's over 12Gbit/s. The T220 needs 3 links to deliver 48Hz refresh rate.

  33. Re:Complainer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Uhhh, Retina is an Apple trademark, and Apple Retina displays have the best color accuracy out there in tablet and laptop formats. That's what retina has to do with color gamut.

    Torvalds wouldn't be complaining if it weren't for Apple setting a higher standard. Apparently this really irks him.

    Amazingly technology often progresses at an exponential rate, so none of us (King Torvalds included) should be surprised that even higher (and useless) resolution is to be "soon" available than was 7 months ago.

  34. I don't need a standard... by Maltheus · · Score: 1

    ...I just need a 2560x1600 monitor that doesn't cost four times as a similar res tablet, with its own processor, battery, wifi, memory, GPS, touchscreen and wireless HDMI.

    1. Re:I don't need a standard... by snadrus · · Score: 1

      Use VNC?

      --
      Science & open-source build trust from peer review. Learn systems you can trust.
  35. High Definition TV is the driver for this tech now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    HD TV seems to be driving this. Resolution used to be higher as far back as 5 years ago then the industry took a step backwards and everything including desktop panels regressed to 1080 lines.

    This might take another leap forward with Quad HD at 3840x2160 when teh dust settles, but it will take a while.

  36. Re:Problem by KingMotley · · Score: 2

    As someone who actually developed some software for iOS I can safely say you don't know what you are talking about.

    The only things that MAGICALLY get blown up is older software that doesn't understand the new resolutions. That is why there are apps marked "For iPad" originally. Because the screen resolution was different, it had a different set of resources. Most of the newer apps work by having different sets of resources based on the hardware it is run on and uses the appropriate one.

  37. Re:Problem by Anubis+IV · · Score: 1

    It isn't just blown up. Rasterized elements are able to have a direct mapping between the physical pixels at a lower resolution and the four physical pixels that take their place at the higher resolution, meaning that they appear identical to how they looked before. In the meantime, vectorized elements can take advantage of the additional physical pixels, allowing them to look significantly sharper on the higher resolution displays. That's why text on the new MacBook Pro line can look really great compared to how it looked before, while screenshots you took previously seem to not look any better at all.

    Of course, one problem in this approach is that even though the rasterized elements actually appear identical on the screen to how they used to appear, people, such as yourself, perceive them as being blown up and/or more pixelated than they were before, simply on account of the fact that they look like they are that way when placed next to the vectorized elements. The fix for that is to provide higher-res copies of the rasterized elements, or else convert them to a vectorized format. Unfortunately, both of those are time-consuming when you consider the sheer breadth of items that need to be updated, not just within the OS itself, but also in web browsers, third-party applications, media, and other items.

  38. Re:Problem by Swarley · · Score: 1

    Complete stupidity.

    The pixel quadruple resolution was chosen to allow OLD apps to run at the OLD resolution without looking as much like crap as they would on a non-integer pixel increase. NEW apps can and do run at the native resolution and work just fine and do look a lot better. The original post was completely wrong and stupid. That's all there is to it.

  39. Re:Bring back 4:3 aspect ratio+full-layout keyboar by darkain · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The problem is that they are not indeed "full" keyboards. Some have the 10-key on the side, but they still move around things like the directional arrows and other special keys (or remove them entirely).

  40. The race to the bottom by tlhIngan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem has been that the PC market was so commoditized that the amount of money made is so little. Everyone cries for the sub-$500 laptop, so manufacturers comply, leading to cutting of corners everywhere - LCDs are expensive (especially high-res ones), GPUs, etc. CPUs, RAM and hard drives are cheap, so you can get ones with the best gigas for marketing.

    The only reaosn we have manufacturers going for higher quality displays is because of well, Apple. Since Apple refuses to participate in the low end ("Macs are overpriced!") it means Apple hsa to constantly refine their PCs to make it worth the money.

    E.g., use of full metal bodies, high res displays, SSDs, etc. They do this to separate themselves from the rest of the pack.

    Heck, once you promise better margins to manufacturers, they start spending that money on R&D - see the ultrabook line. They all cost around the price of a Macbook Air, or easily double or triple what the low end laptops sell for. As a result, we get them with all sorts of different screen resolutions.

    Basically in the race to produce the cheapest laptop, they've left the premium market to Apple, who appeals to those who like a laptop with clean lines, "exotic" materials and other things.

    Oh, and Apple invested a lot of money making high-res displays - it's not as easy to build a 15" 2880x1800 screen as it is a 15" 1366x768 screen. First off, more pixels mean more transistors and greater chance of dead pixels, lowering yield. Second, being able to address those transistors and ensure the pixels are all good is a lot harder with the smaller pixel size. So Apple's pretty much owning all the R&D on that (especially with Sharp in financial trouble).

    1. Re:The race to the bottom by don.g · · Score: 1

      Did Apple really do the high DPI display R&D? I thought they bought the displays from Samsung and LG (and maybe others), and that those displays varied in quality, suggesting that each manufacturer has their own process rather than just doing what uncle Apple tells them to.

      --
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    2. Re:The race to the bottom by jo_ham · · Score: 3, Informative

      Did Apple really do the high DPI display R&D? I thought they bought the displays from Samsung and LG (and maybe others), and that those displays varied in quality, suggesting that each manufacturer has their own process rather than just doing what uncle Apple tells them to.

      When he says "Apple invested a lot of money" into the process he means exactly that - Samsung and LG didn't just drop the cash on the R&D for those panels, even though they did the work. They did the work because Apple cut them a hefty cheque.

      See also, ARM CPUs made by Samsung - Apple gave them a huge bundle of setup cash to improve their facilities to get the A6 line of CPUs rolling.

      The point is that *even though Apple itself is not doing the actual work of lifting the pick, swinging it at the rock, collecting the coal*, they are still driving the market for those technologies that no other vendor is willing to pay for. Samsung will make high DPI panels for anyone who wants them - Apple is not special in that respect - but they were the first ones willing to pay for the R&D. Once that expensive R&D is paid for though, the "build to a price, race to the bottom" vendors will come knocking.

    3. Re:The race to the bottom by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1

      Compaq still make high end laptops with matte displays, 4 GB video ram, fast GPUs etc. Apple's only pluses are high pixel density and OS X. The fact that Compaq still makes these means there is still a market for them. Sure, its not the bulk of the market but I'm sure it is still profitable given people will pay $US 3k and up for one of these performance laptops (I'm looking at getting one soon since Apple's hardware is so far behind now).

    4. Re:The race to the bottom by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      When he says "Apple invested a lot of money" into the process he means exactly that - Samsung and LG didn't just drop the cash on the R&D for those panels, even though they did the work. They did the work because Apple cut them a hefty cheque.

      Actually they were ramping up to that in preparation for 4k anyway. Display manufacturers are always looking for the next thing to make you upgrade, especially when it comes to TVs. First it was 3D, now it is better resolution.

      That is how Apple operates. They wait for the tech to become available and jump in first before anyone else. Most manufacturers would have to consider the potential market and how likely people are to pay extra for a particular feature, but Apple knows people will just buy their latest widget regardless. 1.8" HDDs, iPod wheels, small multi-touch screens, natural language voice recognition... None of it was invented or even asked for my Apple.

      See also, ARM CPUs made by Samsung - Apple gave them a huge bundle of setup cash to improve their facilities to get the A6 line of CPUs rolling.

      Tooling costs are not the same thing as investing in new plants. Samsung did that to stay competitive and to manufacture their own CPUs. Samsung has always made far more CPUs for itself than it ever did for Apple.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  41. Re:Problem by Guy+Harris · · Score: 1

    Have you even TRIED a retina display macbook?

    I have. I got one a month or so ago, have been using it as my only machine since then, and am typing this response on it. (The main reason was to get 16GB of memory and a lot more "disk" space, not anything to do with the display.)

    Apparently not, since you're trying to argue it's not just blown up. It's exact 4x the size of the default 1440x900 for a reason.

    Yes, it allows applications/images/etc. that don't use the native resolution to do pixel-doubling while allowing those that do to use the native resolution. No, the graphics layer does not make all apps think they're on a 1440x900 display and then do pixel-doubling; it exposes the native 2880x1800 to Cocoa apps that can handle it, and does some high-res stuff ("framework-scaled mode") for Cocoa apps "whose code base has not yet been optimized for high-resolution graphics" and "[aren't] known to have significant issues when running in framework-scaled mode" and weren't explicitly opened in low-resolution mode, and does pixel-doubling ("magnified mode") for everything else. Follow The Fine Link for details.

    So the claim that "the retina display and other 'high def' isn't actually a true display of that resolution, just a multiplication of the pixels in a 1:4 ratio of a smaller resolution.", if meant to be a general description of the behavior of all code on a Retina MBP under all OSes including OS X, is false. I can't speak for other high-def machines and the graphics layers of the desktop environments that run on them, but I wouldn't be surprised if at least some of them also provide native resolution to apps that can handle it. Anybody making the strong version of that claim has either not ever used a Retina MBP, did so on an OS that doesn't handle the native resolution, or did use it on an OS that can handle it but wasn't paying attention.

    As for the rest of the post in question:

    Laptops are lacking in graphical power and actually providing that as a true resolution is a bit of a hard proposition for anyone for an actual laptop that might have to do anything graphically demanding.

    ...which doesn't ipso facto mean that no laptop provides that as a true resolution. I don't know how you define "graphically demanding"; I generally don't do anything I would consider too "graphically demanding" (a lot of Terminal.app, a fair bit of Safari.app and Mail.app and NetNewsWire.app, a fair bit of VMware Fusion.app and Quicken.app, and bits of other things), so maybe anything truly "graphically demanding" wouldn't work well, but that doesn't mean that Apple didn't say "OK, maybe your laptop will heat up a fair bit and slow down somewhat if you do something really graphically demanding, but it'll still show pretty crisp text, UI controls, and images properly tuned for high resolution" (yes, some stuff probably not tuned for high resolution, such as the gear next to the "Post Anonymously" label in the posting box for the reply I'm typing, look noticeably fuzzy).

    That and it doesn't particularly look very good just making those smaller resolutions just 'blown up'.

    True, as noted, but when it's rendering stuff at native resolution, it looks pretty good. I'm willing to put up with fuzzy images in some cases in order to get the crisper text for my aging eyes.

  42. Re:Problem by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    I dare you to even find a desktop that can handle 2560x1600 for modern games that doesn't cost you upwards of $2000

    I have one. It really doesn't take nearly as much as you think it does - people have been running in 1920x1200 at 4x FSAA on mid-range hardware for years now; for higher-res, you just drop the FSAA (because it's not needed anymore at those DPIs), and rasterized pixel count remains the same, or even lower.

  43. Re:Problem by Nerdfest · · Score: 2

    MacBooks do not run iOS ... yet.

  44. How would it affect battery life? by jader3rd · · Score: 1

    How would having a 2560x1600 display affect battery life over 1366x768? Given that battery life became a big issue, if it would affect battery life in hours I can see why laptop makers would have sacrificed resolution for battery life.

    1. Re:How would it affect battery life? by Newtonian_p · · Score: 2

      I believe most of the monitor's power drain comes from the back light. For a given screen size, the back light should be the same regardless of the resolution so I expect little impact on battery life.

      --

      There are 2 kinds of people in this world: Those who write in decimal and those who don't

    2. Re:How would it affect battery life? by mjwx · · Score: 1

      How would having a 2560x1600 display affect battery life over 1366x768? Given that battery life became a big issue, if it would affect battery life in hours I can see why laptop makers would have sacrificed resolution for battery life.

      I dont think it would affect battery life as much as it would affect price. To get a 25600x1600 screen it would cost a lot more than a 1366x768 or 1920x180 screen.

      I want high resolution displays too, but I dont want to go back to paying A$2000 for an entry level laptop either. Given the laptops I buy are 13-14" models, 1366x768 is fine although I prefer 1440x900 on 14". High res displays have a huge drawback in the fact most OS's assume high res == large monitor and have their UI's designed accordingly (try running Win 7 on a 15" 1920x1080 display, the default text size is almost unreadable).

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    3. Re:How would it affect battery life? by toddestan · · Score: 2

      The GPU will have to work harder to drive the display, which would probably account for most of whatever difference there might be.

    4. Re:How would it affect battery life? by Arterion · · Score: 1

      This may or may not be true if by "work harder" you mean "consume more power". The next generation of integrated video powering next generation higher resolution displays could very well consume LESS power, even though they are doing more computations.

      --
      "That which does not kill us makes us stranger." -Trevor Goodchild
    5. Re:How would it affect battery life? by Graham+J+-+XVI · · Score: 1

      Higher pixel densities let a lot less light through so the backlight ends up requiring more power to compensate. That's why the iPad 3's battery was 70% bigger than the 2's for the same battery life.

  45. Re:Complainer by Nerdfest · · Score: 1

    Most of us have been on rants for higher resolution displays for years.

  46. Re:There is high-res light at the end of the tunne by thoth · · Score: 1

    Next, the operating system vendors need to get their heads out of their asses and finish implementing proper multi-resolution support instead of the half-assed job they've been getting away with for decades because of the persistent assumption that higher-resolution = bigger-surface-area!

    This isn't just an OS problem, it's the apps that don't always handle multi-resolution support as well. It's easy for the OS to change, but when the apps look like crap or are unusable, reality sets in.

  47. Why stop there? by Tough+Love · · Score: 1

    And touchscreens Linus, touchscreens.

    What is it about laptops that means it is ok to leave them in the stone age in terms of usability? Oh... Microsoft.

    --
    When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
  48. Re:Problem by Farmer+Tim · · Score: 1
    --
    Blank until /. makes another boneheaded UI decision.
  49. Film formats by Kupfernigk · · Score: 1

    In fact film formats were 1.5 to 1 (35mm and 6x9), 4:3 (15 on 120), 4:5 (plate formats) and square. I have used all of these and I feel that 4:5 is overall the best for static images. But it is inconvenient for laptops. 16 by 9 is tolerable, but then for actual work I stack two monitors vertically which gives 2160 by 1920 - a good compromise for development. For anybody over 40, monitor size is far more important than minute pixels.

    --
    From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
  50. Re:Problem by BitZtream · · Score: 1

    Shrug, I have no problem playing on my laptop with 2880x1800, bf3 isn't exactly high end anymore.

    --
    Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
  51. Wow. Do you actually believe that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Please tell me that was a troll. I don't want to think anyone so uninformed can actually type or turn on a computer.

  52. Re:Problem by socceroos · · Score: 1

    Same difference. You're forgiven.

  53. And when it comes to the display by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Apple didn't develop shit. They contacted one of the display manufacturers, I believe LG Displays in this case, and said "We want a display with these specs. If you will make us one and guarantee us exclusivity for a period of time, we will guarantee a large minimum order."

    That's all well and good but stop pretending like it was some amazing feat of R&D on Apple's part. They just had a display made for them, same as ever.

    1. Re:And when it comes to the display by Gansan · · Score: 2

      You need a customer to drive the production of those displays. If no one steps up and demands them, no one will bother building them. Apple deserves credit for that, don't you think?

    2. Re:And when it comes to the display by kimvette · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why do they get all the credit for merely delivering technology that has been possible but unavailable from other vendorrs?

      . . . because they deliver technology that has been possible, but unavailable from other vendors. Duh. ;)

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    3. Re:And when it comes to the display by djrobxx · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You totally missed the point.

      The Retina display macbook was delivered with an updated OSX which could take advantage of the added resolution, without making everything unusably small. Coordinating those things to offer a desktop OS with a USABLE high resolution screen is, in fact, something to commended.

      I have a 30" cinema display. It looks great under Windows where I can adjust the DPI. However, when you do adjust the DPI, there are an assortment of compatibility problems. Even big ticket apps, like Adobe Photoshop/Dreamweaver don't work right. You'll have dialog boxes pop up with missing controls. There are some "compatibility options" which can fix it, but then you're left with blurry applications. Or you leave the DPI alone and deal with uncomfortably tiny text and icons.

    4. Re:And when it comes to the display by purpledinoz · · Score: 1

      But Apple is the competitive force that pushes the others to provide high resolution displays on laptops, hopefully.

    5. Re:And when it comes to the display by thoth · · Score: 1

      If you will make us one and guarantee us exclusivity for a period of time, we will guarantee a large minimum order."

      I don't think you can dismiss this so casually... ponying up money to make it happen was a risk Apple was willing to do, and I'm sure there were some other cash transfers to assist with the R&D costs associated with developing this display tech.

      If it were that easy and such a no-brainer, then I guess ALL other notebook manufacturer are lazy and incompetent?

  54. Re:Put your money where your mouth is, and buy one by Lincolnshire+Poacher · · Score: 4, Insightful

    By a 2880x1800 or 2560x1600 Retina Macbook, when they sell in numbers, competitors will follow.

    So you're suggesting that Mr Linux buy a laptop on which .... Linux barely runs, and has no idea how to handle the display resolution? And cannot switch between the integrated and discrete graphics? And which needs a binary blob to even use the b43 wifi?

    How would that make him more productive?

  55. Re:Fonts by Guy+Harris · · Score: 1

    Who can read anything at that resolution for fuck sake?

    Those of us with 1) aging eyes and 2) desktop environments that draw text, GUI widgets, etc. at high resolution (i.e., they use ~4x the number of pixels to draw stuff at the same size, rather than drawing stuff at 1/2 the horizontal and vertical sizes).

  56. Re:LCD vendors don't want cheap HD projection syst by JDG1980 · · Score: 1

    One big reason is cost: not only are low-resolution screens cheaper to make, but the manufacturers can use the same line of panels for both HDTVs and monitors.

    Another reason is that many users don't know how to properly set DPI scaling in Windows, and until Windows 7, it often didn't work properly even if you did. Some applications on XP would break DPI scaling and result in icons, text, etc. overflowing the window boundaries. Even on Windows 7, there are a few applications that lie to the system, saying that they're DPI-aware when they are not, and give broken results. (We ran into one of these at work – a library system front-end where the icons appeared all black if any DPI except the default was used. A bug fix for that was finally put through, but it took some time.)

  57. Re:Only a temporary fix by JDG1980 · · Score: 2

    As long as everyone and their dog have high resolution screens now, we're doomed to see screen real estate dwindle back to the 80'ties level as designers keep inflating fonts, icons and white space to keep Joe Public with something that looks like the 800x600 he's used to. I miss the day when only enthusiasts had high resolution monitors and we actually got more space.

    That's what the DPI setting is for. The handful of enthusiasts with 20/10 vision can keep all their precious screen space, and everyone else can get the sharper fonts, icons, and images at readable sizes like they want.

  58. Re:Bring back 4:3 aspect ratio+full-layout keyboar by TeknoHog · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Keypads on laptops are barbaric. The typing space should be centered with the display, buddhammit!

    --
    Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
  59. Re:Fonts by Guy+Harris · · Score: 1

    Or, to quote some dude up in Oregon:

    And the next technology journalist that asks you whether you want fonts that small, I'll just hunt down and give an atomic wedgie. I want pixels for high-quality fonts, and yes, I want my fonts small, but "high resolution" really doesn't equate "small fonts" like some less-than-gifted tech pundits seem to constantly think.

    In fact, if you have bad vision, sharp good high-quality fonts will help.

    (+1 for Linus for "atomic wedgie" - but, really, "less-than-gifted" is kinda the default for tech pundits, given that a lot of them are paid to be adbait)

  60. Re:Complainer by JDG1980 · · Score: 1

    Apple doesnt have retina displays. Samsung, LG, and Sharp do.

    But these companies don't sell high-DPI standalone displays (or laptops) under their own brand names. They produce these parts for the Apple market only (and in Samsung's case, for the new Nexus 10).

  61. Once again Linus proves he's all sour grapes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Why the pissy attitude about "retina"? Is it just because Linus didn't snatch up the challenge first and now wants to redefine the terms that are already the standard? Sounds like Linus has a big of stick up his ass about others pushing the limits and defining terms that he can't lay any claim to. But what can he really lay claim to?
     
    I don't expect much else from the guy who ripped off Unix and acts like he's somehow a revolutionary. I remember how much people moaned when Dennis Ritchie died a few days after Jobs and the media ignored Ritchie. Why doesn't anyone moan about how Ritchie's legacy is largely ignored by Linux fanbois?

    1. Re:Once again Linus proves he's all sour grapes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Linus 'Hell-sink-ye' Torvalds, a short history:

      1996 -

      To Crowd: Oh, you're calling it Linux? Personally, I don't give a crap about the name, GNU, GNU/Linux, Linux, whatever, names are stupid and I only care about meaty, manly stuff that matters, I am an engineer, call it what you like. Even if you insist on calling it Linux, I don't give a crap.
      Aside: Hahaha! Fuck GNU, I do stupid student project on top of their decade and a half worth of work, now all of it is named after meeee!! Hahaha, and some of those dolts even think I don't have a massive ego!!! Can't they tell by my ever pissy, primadonna manner! I insult half of them, call their work shit, and steal the other half's work with no acnkowledgement - the perfect crime for the perfect egoist! Mwahahah!

      2016:

      To Crowd: Oh, you're calling it Torsize Display? Personally, I don't give a crap about the name, Retina, Retina/Torsize, Torsize, whatever, names are stupid and I only care about meaty, manly, hard stuff that matters, I am an engineer, call it what you like. Torsize is fine, just call it something.

      Aside: Haha! Just like I did with GNU, I fucked Apple! Those shits will now get no credit for their clearly pioneering work in forcing the mainstream laptop market to support higher resolution displays. Now, no one will call them Retina displays - stupid ,awful name, what kind of name only refers, obliquely it must be admitted, to what the technology does! - instead, they name them after meee!! I'm the best, everyone else is stupid, we Fins even insult you and say to your face that your life's work a steaming pile of shit made by mentally damaged monkeys, like I did to those stupid CVS shitheads at my git talk at Google, we do these things and just say 'its our kind of humour'. Hahaha, I steal your ideas and call you stupid, what could be better!!!! I love meeeeee!

  62. Re:Put your money where your mouth is, and buy one by jimicus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If Linus Torvalds can't get together the necessary people to get Linux to run decently on the rMBP, there is something very wrong with the world.

  63. Re:Fonts by JDG1980 · · Score: 1

    It works much better on Windows 7 than it did on XP. Basically, on Windows 7, if an application doesn't specifically say in its manifest that it supports high-DPI scenarios, then the OS will fool it into thinking it's running at the standard DPI, render into an off-screen buffer, and scale the results. This may not be razor-sharp, but it prevents the scenarios seen under XP where some poorly-designed applications would have parts of the UI cut off when you increased the DPI setting. If your application tells the OS that it knows how to deal with DPI changes, the OS will trust it to do that right. Unfortunately, a few applications lie to the OS about this and still give corrupted results.

  64. Oh, your Gods, he is so right! by Tastecicles · · Score: 1

    I've got a second screen plugged in because the 15" panel on my laptop is TOO DAMN SMALL! 1366x768 is ridiculous! I've still got a Dell Latitude Celeron that has 1280x1024 on a 14" - and a P4 with 1600x1200 on a 15"! Where the fuck is my pin sharp resolution display that I had on a single core laptop that I couldn't *give* away even if I wanted to?

    I'll tell you: flat panel televisions, that's where. 1440x900 for 720p and 1920x1200 for 1080p, while laptops get 1366x768 (yeah barely even 720p quality, forget HDTV!), and if you want 1080p standard on a market screen you're forced to fork out for a 22" Apple Cinema display or a Macbook Pro! Fucking joke...

    By the way, it is possible to upgrade *most* laptop panels. Example: my Toshiba has a 15" panel which has 1366x768, so I'd need to find one which has the same frame size (15" diagonal at 16:9 aspect). The highest resolution panel I can find that meets those criteria is the Samsung Retina (for the Macbook Pro) at 2880x1800 which goes for around £90 a pop ($45 to produce, which is exactly the same unit production cost as a 720p panel the same size!). The GPU in the laptop would be able to drive that, also consider that the clock hardware is already on the panel so all I'd need to do is marry the connectors. Usually all that involves is inserting the loose end of a ribbon into an edge connector...

    --
    Operation Guillotine is in effect.
  65. Re:High Definition TV is the driver for this tech by Tastecicles · · Score: 1

    Quad HD is dead in the water, 4K is it now!

    --
    Operation Guillotine is in effect.
  66. Re:There is high-res light at the end of the tunne by robi5 · · Score: 1

    So 720p is 768 rows, 1080p is 1080 rows and 4k is 2160 rows, and not even 4k columns? Who named it so? In Best Buy: "See how much better this 4k screen is, compared to that 1080"

  67. Re:Complainer by Tastecicles · · Score: 1

    Is the Samsung P10 anywhere near market yet??

    --
    Operation Guillotine is in effect.
  68. Re:Put your money where your mouth is, and buy one by bertok · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Putting your money where your mouth is, trumps whining on a blog every time.

    Except there is NOWHERE for my money to go. I can't vote with my wallet, because every vendor makes the exact same fucking thing, without the slightest variation. This a total failure of the free market.

    Sure, finally, after years of stagnation, Apple made a single laptop model that has a screen resolution higher than 1920x1200.

    Fine.

    Now find me a 17" laptop that has a keyboard that drops the numeric keypad so that it can have standard 101-key spacing for the rest of the keyboard.

    There is no such thing. It does not exist. There is no laptop manufacturer on the whole planet that will sell me a 17" laptop that has a keyboard designed with keys like a traditional keyboard. Without exception, they all squeeze in a numeric keypad I never use, and re-use keyboards designed for 15" laptops in their 17" models. None of the usual extra-wide gaps are present, so I can't touch-type properly. I have trouble hitting the ESC key, the function keys, the arrow keys, and ins/del/pg-up/pg-dn, none of which are EVER in the standard positions. Often those keys are half-sized too, for extra frustration.

    I've said this before on Slashdot in the vain hope that that somebody from a laptop hardware vendor still frequents this Internet backwater: I will pay a $500 price premium for a laptop with a proper keyboard. However, I'm certain that this won't ever happen. We're all just consumers watching 1080p "content". Not a single programmer has ever had to use a laptop. Fuck them, and their money. That's the attitude I've been sensing from the OEMs. I don't expect it to change any time soon.

    If it was at all possible, I'd start my own laptop company, and make a line of "Pro" laptops for the type of people who type with more than one finger at a time. It would have clicky keys, a 4K display, a water-resistant chassis, an externally accessible hot-swap SATA drive bay, and an 10Gbps SFP port on the back. In certain industries, it would be the only model anybody would want to buy, irrespective of cost.

  69. Re:Wow. Do you actually believe that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's not a troll, it's the fundamental concept of Internet Libertarianism: any time the free market has decided that your preferences aren't widespread enough to be worth catering to, it was actually a secret cabal of statists.

    Never mind that CRT monitors take up eight times the store shelf space of LCDs, or that the overwhelming majority of consumers genuinely prefer an LCD flat panel over a CRT, regardless if the CRT has better picture quality, or that every laptop manufacturer other than Apple has been on a cost-cutting race to the bottom for a decade now and that naturally includes the cheapest screens that will fit the size envelope. Oh, no, it's the environmentalists' fault that you can't buy CRT monitors at WalMart anymore, with their dastardly voluntary EnergyStar conspiracy.

  70. Re:Problem by KingMotley · · Score: 1

    Wow. Didn't think I would have to point out I was referring to the AC talking about it being the same on the iPad, but apparently I do.

    For the other dense readers, yes, the iPad runs iOS. Just to be on the safe side.

  71. Re:Bring back 4:3 aspect ratio+full-layout keyboar by donatzsky · · Score: 1

    Frankly, this is something I've never understood. I mean, I've got a bloody netbook (a Dell Latitude 2110) with a mostly-normal keyboard, yet even 15" or bigger consumer laptops have absolutely crazy keyboard layouts with the keys all over the place, or, as you say, even missing.
    It's almost as if they try to make them as user-hostile as possible.

  72. I would rather see linux GUI fixed by WaffleMonster · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I have a 14.1" display with 1400x1050 and I can't see adding more pixels would help me any unless it includes an eyeball upgrade.

    I wouldn't even opt for an upgraded display if it were free as it would just suck more CPU/GPU resources and power for nothing when using 3d apps.

    Mobile devices may be a little different in limited size and reasonable expectation they could at times be held much closer to the face higher pixel density could make more sense.

    After a certain point I believe has already been reached with my 1400x1050 display increasing resolution is like increasing spring counts in mattresses it is only seen as worthwhile to the marketing departments.

    I think the real issue behind Torvalds request may actually be an artifact in the way linux handles fonts, font scaling and lack of availability of quality fonts for linux. Without aliasing the output looks unecessarily horrible and the result has always been to increase font size to brush over the underlying problem..this effectivly effectivly reduces information density of the display compared with windows.

    If you had a 2560x1600 display on a portable computer and there is still any font aliasing going on then something is very wrong and it aint the hardware.

    1. Re:I would rather see linux GUI fixed by Tastecicles · · Score: 1

      if you can visually separate two pixels at normal viewing distance then the density isn't high enough. This might be of extreme importance if you're retouching photos.

      End of.

      --
      Operation Guillotine is in effect.
  73. Dear Linus by mynamestolen · · Score: 1

    How do I check my display resolution in Linux?

    --
    work in progress
    1. Re:Dear Linus by unitron · · Score: 1

      How do I check my display resolution in Linux?

      With a really good magnifying glass and an ability not to lose count.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  74. Re:Problem by RMingin · · Score: 1

    Hi! I'm facts. We haven't talked in a while, thought I'd drop by and see how you're doing. Looks like you've missed me a lot, why didn't you make any effort at all to check your statements?

    Upscaling is what you describe. The Retina Macbook doesn't do that unless you ask it to. Decent PC monitors don't do that unless you set a lower resolution, or lack the hardware to run native resolution (single link DVI on monitors over 1920x1200, for example). Assuming everyone does that is just misinformed. iPads do that, when you run older apps that haven't been updated to understand newer screen resolutions. Not so much on Android, Windows, Linux, or OSX proper.

    --
    The preceding comment is my own, and in no way construes an opinon of the Emperor of Mankind.
  75. Re:Problem by RMingin · · Score: 1

    Hi! Smee again!

    Laptop with Intel HD 3000 graphics (pretty low end). I don't game with it, but it does do full screen video and 2D just flawlessly at 1920x1200 *2 (dual monitors are wonderful), and I've had it hooked up to dual 2560*1600 displays, where 2D and video were also excellent. Thanks for playing!

    --
    The preceding comment is my own, and in no way construes an opinon of the Emperor of Mankind.
  76. I still use 1280x1024 resolution... by antdude · · Score: 1

    ... on my 19" 5:4 LCD monitor at home with desktop PCs. :/

    --
    Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
  77. 1366x768 will last until Windows catches up :( by Watertowers · · Score: 1

    The big problem is Windows. If you look at the driving force behind all PC/Laptop sales for the last decade or more, it has been the Windows OS, and since it can't handle high-res screens well (with regards to scaling what is displayed), there have not been any high-res screens that do not natively display something that is readable to the average person. Look at the surface with Windows 8 and what resolution they chose. When Windows catches up, so will laptop resolutions.

    I was kind of hoping Windows 8 was going to address the issue, but looks like yet another F$%^# up by redmond. They also need to compete on screen resolution if they want to beat Apple. Apple has highlighted that people want something that looks nice, provides a great user experience, and feels solid (ie not cheap). Build quality sounds like it is a pass and arguably Windows have worked on the user experience (epic fail from what I have tried of the pre releases of Win8), it also looks ok but they failed to provide the finishing touches of a nice high-res screen to make everything look like you can reach out and grab it.

    I have wanted to have a 2560x1600 laptop display on my 15inch for a long time, since before the "Retina Display", but everyone I work with think I am crazy for wanting it. The screen real estate is precious to a developer. Yes the text is small, but I have the screen reasonable close to my face and could easily work on a smaller font if it was crisp enough for reading. I also want a 16 core processor and 64GB RAM in my laptop, at least until the broadband speeds allow me to run a private cloud at home that I can access from anywhere. I use virtual machines a lot and regularly exhaust my 16GB RAM and 8 cores on my laptop anytime I want to run end-to-end testing.

    I hope Linus can push for something to happen before Windows catches up, but I have my doubts.

    1. Re:1366x768 will last until Windows catches up :( by bemymonkey · · Score: 1

      "I have wanted to have a 2560x1600 laptop display on my 15inch for a long time, since before the "Retina Display", but everyone I work with think I am crazy for wanting it. The screen real estate is precious to a developer. Yes the text is small, but I have the screen reasonable close to my face and could easily work on a smaller font if it was crisp enough for reading. I also want a 16 core processor and 64GB RAM in my laptop, at least until the broadband speeds allow me to run a private cloud at home that I can access from anywhere. I use virtual machines a lot and regularly exhaust my 16GB RAM and 8 cores on my laptop anytime I want to run end-to-end testing."

      Are you my soul-mate? :p

  78. Triple head vs. 3D by rwa2 · · Score: 2

    Yeah, thanks for making me feel bad for breaking not one but two of my nice 1920x1200 LCDs.

    OTOH, 1920x1080 is getting cheap enough that you could grab 2 or even 3 for the price of one WUXGA display. Which makes me want to work and/or play three screens...
      http://techreport.com/review/23217/triple-screen-gaming-on-today-graphics-cards

    But since I'm a cheapskate, I just picked up a handful of cheap 19" - 21" CRTs from craigslist for between $5 - $20 each.

    For laptops, I would just as soon try to set up compiz-fusion to scale (with full anti-aliasing) a large VNC session or something, so I can zoom in and out of a large X server session. I'm kinda wondering why more UIs aren't really going this route (other than maybe being slightly nauseating.)

  79. Re:Complainer by mjwx · · Score: 1

    Apple doesnt have retina displays.

    Samsung, LG, and Sharp do.

    Actually, neither do. Apple sells LG, Samsung and Sharp displays (Samsung, LG and Sharp also sell their own displays).

    Apple brands other manufacturers displays as "retina" which is why they aren't all the same display. They could make a 300x400 20" display and call it "retina" because "retina" is not a measure of resolution, it's a marketing buzzword.

    --
    Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  80. IPS should be an even bigger priority by jensen404 · · Score: 1

    I love high pixel density, but I think better viewing angles are even more needed. I'd like to see IPS become the standard like it has for LCD smartphones and tablets.

  81. Re:Complainer by jensen404 · · Score: 1

    The iPod previous generation iPod Touch is labled as having a Retina display, yet it has poor color gamut and viewing angles (it isn't IPS)
    The iPhone 4 had a fairly low gamut display. (And I think the 4s was the same)

  82. Ruin your eyes.... by katorga · · Score: 1

    Human eyes either can't see that many pixels crammed onto such a tiny screen, or will eventually ruin their eyesight trying. A smart vendor avoids the inevitable lawsuits.

    I used a 1920x1200 15" laptop for a while, and found it unusable long term, especially with Windows. X-windows was doable. Apple has a long history of deciding what the ergonomically correct resolution is for a display size and sticking with it. 13" was 640x480. 16" was 832x624, etc. All of Apple's CRT monitors were fixed resolution with the same display DPI. Even retina displays are only used to make the ergonomic resolution "look better".

    1. Re:Ruin your eyes.... by Yosho · · Score: 1

      Human eyes either can't see that many pixels crammed onto such a tiny screen, or will eventually ruin their eyesight trying.

      Wow, that's quite a stretch. Do you have any kind of evidence that looking at high-resolution screens actually damages your eyesight?

      Reality is way higher-resolution than any screen, and my eyes are still doing fine.

      --
      Karma: Terrifying (mostly affected by atrocities you've committed)
  83. Re:Put your money where your mouth is, and buy one by mjwx · · Score: 1

    If Linus Torvalds can't get together the necessary people to get Linux to run decently on the rMBP, there is something very wrong with the world.

    Yes, hardware resellers like Apple are making it very, very hard for Linux to run on their laptops.

    It's hard to reverse engineer things from scratch, getting Linux to run on an Intel IGM is a dream because Intel released the source code for the IGM drivers. Broadcom didn't do this for their wireless chipsets IIRC, which is why it's a pain to get Broadcom wireless working with Linux.

    I dont expect a manufacturer to actively support Linux but I expect them to not actively hinder Linux.

    --
    Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  84. Re:Problem by Guy+Harris · · Score: 1

    Wow. Didn't think I would have to point out I was referring to the AC talking about it being the same on the iPad, but apparently I do.

    For the other dense readers, yes, the iPad runs iOS. Just to be on the safe side.

    ...and the first part of what you said, "The only things that MAGICALLY get blown up is older software that doesn't understand the new resolutions.", also applies, mutatis mutandis, to OS X, as per my response to Anonymous Howard, and this bit of Apple documentation that apparently didn't get linked in my post (sorry about that).

  85. Re:Complainer by RocketRabbit · · Score: 2

    Everybody already knows that Apple doesn't make the displays. This doesn't change the fact that Apple has created the high-rez tablet and laptop markets single-handedly.

    If Apple hadn't placed orders for millions and millions of these displays, and even gone to the extent of partnering with companies in constructing the factory processes that enable their manufacture, would these displays even be on offer now, in 2012?

    It's highly doubtful.

    Apple also created the large-scale tablet market with the iPad, and the current archetype for a smartphone is the Apple iPhone.

    Yes, you have Apple to thank for your whizzy Samsung or Motorola multitouch phone. Have you seen photographs of the pre-iPhone era Android phones? Fuckin' garbage, and they would have stayed in the trash bin had Google not had a spy on Apple's board.

  86. simple solution by amoeba1911 · · Score: 1

    The problem is the the dumb customer doesn't know what 1366x768 means, it's all gibberish random numbers to them. Digital cameras had that same issue also a long time ago, people just couldn't grasp the difference between 320x240 digital cameras and 640x480 cameras (or higher) - they kept asking dumb questions and the explanation resulted in the person getting even more confused - "what do you mean the picture is made of little dots?"

    We all know what happened next: the word "megapixel" revolutionized the industry, and the more megapixel meant better camera (higher megapixel doesn't make better camera! but that's beside the point). The dumb masses had a variable to look for, and they associated higher value with more advanced. Even if they didn't know what a pixel was, they stuck with it and that's probably why you see 8 megapixel cameras on things like phones that really would be just fine with 3.

    Computer monitors and TV's should start using the word "megapixel" also, like cameras do. Right now they're using the word "HD" - which makes the monitor either HD or Not HD. If you start using megapixel to refer to monitors, things will start to become clearer to consumers.

    Here's a list:
    0.3 megapixels: regular VGA mode (640x480)
    0.5 megapixels: iPod "retina" (960x480)
    1.0 megapixels: a 1366x768 monitor (standard laptop display)
    2.1 megapixels: a "high definition" television/monitor (1920x1080)
    3.7 megapixels: the monitor I am using right now (2560x1440)
    4.1 megapixels: the Nexus 10 (2650x1600)

    Then there's the IPS vs. crappy TN. That's a whole other can of worms.

    1. Re:simple solution by canadiannomad · · Score: 1

      Much as I don't really like what megapixel means in terms of cameras, with regards to screens it would be great. Or maybe they could mix it with their existing marketing speak.. Buy your new HD 4.1 Screen now! At least then people could have a variable they don't understand except that "bigger is better" and let the "mine is bigger then yours" fight build us better screens.

      --
      Hmm, the humour and sarcasm seem to have been be lost on you.
  87. Re:Put your money where your mouth is, and buy one by elashish14 · · Score: 1

    This is very insightful. Clearly, the problem here is the Linux devs simply aren't working hard enough. And it has nothing to do with whether hardware manufacturers are willing to volunteer the necessary specs for their implementation. This clearly explains the situation with nvidia and AMD as well.

    --
    I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
  88. Its all about the TVs by jonwil · · Score: 1

    everything going on right now (certainly in the desktop monitor space) is being driven by TV manufacturers who want "Full HD" and aren't interested in anything else.

    So things like viewing angle, resolution and everything else (at least for low-end and mid-range LCDs) is largely dictated by the TV manufacturers.

  89. Re:Put your money where your mouth is, and buy one by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    I would never actually suggest a Sony, but they have at least recently had 17" laptops with centered keyboard and maybe even centered touchpad. They are flimsy and expensive and if you buy one you're a tool, but anyway.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  90. If he doesn't like the resolution of his laptop(s) by morgauxo · · Score: 1

    he can give them to me!

  91. I want bigger pixels by rlh100 · · Score: 1

    I am getting older and finding harder to read small fonts. 2560x1600 pixel displays will only make this worse. Yes, I know I can adjust my fonts but there is no single setting in Linux that adjusts *all* the fonts. In many cases I have to go to the individual app and change a setting. Many times this does not cover all the fonts. Icons, dialog boxes, menus still use the default font. A lot of web pages over ride the font settings to use a small font.

    I have thought about using a 40 inch 1080p TV as a display. It would give me big fat pixels for my tired eyes. Has anyone tried this?

  92. Re:Bring back 4:3 aspect ratio+full-layout keyboar by toddestan · · Score: 1

    This is my favorite solution, but only you have certain models of Thinkpads and you are willing to give up your optical drive.

  93. Dell U2412M by Chirs · · Score: 2

    1920x1200, $369 regular price (but it goes on sale periodically)

  94. A Thinkpad? (Re: Put your money...) by EdmundSS · · Score: 1

    Some Thinkpads have the QWERTY section full-sized (e.g. my T420). Arrow keys are below right shift, and Home, End, etc., are above Backspace, so it's not perfect, but it's better than most...

    1. Re:A Thinkpad? (Re: Put your money...) by bertok · · Score: 1

      Sorry, not even close.

      The few 17 inch models they make have keyboards from 15 inch laptops, the same as everybody else.

      If the left arrow isn't to the right of the enter-key, then it's a squeezed layout, not a real 101-key layout.

      Find me a photo of a current-model 17 inch laptop that has a proper layout. Isolated ESC key, extra gap between numbers and function keys, function keys grouped into sets of four, separate arrow keys, and full sized dedicated ins,del,etc... keys.

      No such thing exists.

  95. Re:Put your money where your mouth is, and buy one by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1

    Those MacBooks have great pixel densities but are totally lame on the amount of video ramm behind the display. I want to replace my MacBook pro with the Retina one, I'd gain a large number of pixels for no increase in video ram and go backwards as I can't get a matte display for Retina. Apple dropped the ball here. They're not actually making what high-end users want. I don't care about the price I care about the specs, and apart from pixel density Apple are far far behind Compaq on desktop replacement laptops :( This is a shame as I rather like OS X.

  96. Re:Apple's are a joke; little different from other by EGSonikku · · Score: 1

    Did love this argument.

    "it's all the same hardware, Apple is no different." Yet Apple devices tend to be higher res, thinner, lighter, etc.

    iPad Vs Surface is a good example. If everyone has access to the same technology then why is the Surface thicker, heavier, no 3G/4G, lower battery life, and a much lower resolution screen (MS specifically said a retina quality display would be too difficult to do due to memory bandwidth issues - tell that one to Apple).

    That's just one example but it holds true when comparing MacBook Pros, iMacs, whatever.

    You can keep saying its all the same, but it's just not.

    --
    - "Scientia non habet inimicum nisp ignorantem"
  97. Re:Apple's are a joke; little different from other by bloodhawk · · Score: 1

    The surface is THINNER not thicket, seems to have better build quality and weighs approximately the same as an Ipad, the ipad does have a better screen though. It also comes with a keyboard and useful ports

  98. 1080p is fine by jsepeta · · Score: 1

    1080p isn't as cool as 4k or 2500xwhatever, but it's a huge leap over 1380x768. Let's get all laptops to 1080p first, since it's less tech- and $- intensive

    --
    Remember kids, if you're not paying for the service, YOU ARE THE PRODUCT THAT IS BEING SOLD.
  99. Re:Bring back 4:3 aspect ratio+full-layout keyboar by vlueboy · · Score: 1

    Yes, this is an absolute pain for games. Then again, laptops shouldn't be used for games ;). The problem is that in my case the laptop was the main computer for several years.

    Like someone said about leaking tablet resolution "improvements" back into the PC world, fullsize keyboards have been playing with stupid layout ideas and removing keys for a decade. Geeky Mac switchers must have a rite of passage with a google search when first trying to printscreen, especially while running Windows. HP keyboards move Insert / Home / End / Page up and Page down. Laptop or not, playing with our non-querty row is a problem for flight simulators MMO's and simple emulators. My laptop vertically lists Delete / Home / Pg-up / Pg-dn/ End in the last row, which is a pain for web browsing without some head lamp on.

    The industry ran out of new cool things to design to differentiate product. They can't reinvent the modern equivalent of "they're all plain ol' beige, so let's ship it in black!". Now they bring chiclet keyboards and tons of incompatible layouts.

    Someone here yesterday wanted death on whoever decided that for Android's software keyboards (virtually non-optional) ENTER should sit right above BACKSPACE... presumably from logins or webforms getting posted "early" EXACTLY as we've located an error that needs backspacing to fix.

  100. Listen to the over-inflated arse? I don't think so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    So because Linux is such a success on laptops we should listen to someone who's sole claim to fame is he bundled 3 lines of his own code with 300,000 lines of other people's code and named the whole lot after himself?

    I don't think so.

  101. for trying to change the system from within by retchdog · · Score: 1

    hey, nice sig, I missed it before. seems a bit apropos here, actually.

    --
    "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    1. Re:for trying to change the system from within by dwywit · · Score: 1

      Thanks - you're the first one to make that connection.

      --
      They sentenced me to twenty years of boredom
  102. Re:Bring back 4:3 aspect ratio+full-layout keyboar by purpledinoz · · Score: 1

    While we're at it, can we also have our screens matte instead of the glossy crap?

  103. Re:Complainer by smash · · Score: 1

    Retina is a rating of pixel density, it's not just a marketing buzzword. If you bother to look, there's info on how it is measured.

    --
    I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  104. resolution still matters by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    At the point you're displaying 2 A4 pages side by side, in order to be equivalent to the portrait monitor you're going to need twice as many pixals.

    Using a 1920x1200 monitor, in portrait you get 1920 pixels of height, allowing a good deal of resolution for the page. 2.3M total pixels.

    Rotate it back, and you only have 63% of the vertical resolution, and half the resolution. Oh well, in either case you're probably going to have to sacrifice some pixels in order to maintain correct proportions if that's important. Even if you have a 2560x1600 monitor, you're still only going to have 2M pixels if you're displaying 2 pages.

    If you're into serious graphics design where you're looking to spend a few thousand on a ultra-color correct high resolution monitor, odds are you're going to be spending a lot of time wanting to have more resolution on a single page in order to get the final printed product 'just right'.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  105. Re:You assume the inevitability of the order. by smash · · Score: 2

    Because sony, HP, Dell, etc are all about undercutting each other on price, rather than building things people want to actually use.

    --
    I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  106. Getting closer by jones_supa · · Score: 1

    There is already machines like the ASUS UX21A, which is an ultrabook that packs 1920x1080 in 11.6". However using today's OSes and apps (DPI scaling problems) I would imagine using something like that could be still quite painful.

  107. Re:Bring back 4:3 aspect ratio+full-layout keyboar by unitron · · Score: 1

    I think you're missing his point. He's not quite satisfied with 0-9, he wants a 10 key as well... ;)

    Screw that! I want one that goes up to 11!

    And that has a "more cowbell" key as well!

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  108. Re:Put your money where your mouth is, and buy one by unitron · · Score: 1

    "Except there is NOWHERE for my money to go. I can't vote with my wallet, because every vendor makes the exact same fucking thing, without the slightest variation. This a total failure of the free market."

    In other words, it's just like nowadays everybody has been forced into carrying the same stuff as Wal-Mart does, but you've a slightly lower chance of getting trapped behind a herd of fat families blocking the aisles in Target or K-Mart.

    --

    I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  109. Re:Bring back 4:3 aspect ratio+full-layout keyboar by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

    Widescreen is definitely better when you have a single display since you can have side-by-side documents. It also helps make the task bar wider when you have lots of windows open, or more tabs in your browser etc. All TV and movies are widescreen now too.

    Widescreen is also handy on airplanes where the guy in front reclines his seat, leaving you with little vertical space above your tray to put the screen upright. I have a 1680x1200 13" Panasonic Let's Note that is 4:3 and quickly discovered this when the guy sat next to me opened his widescreen 13" MacBook easily in a way I couldn't.

    I'd rather have good sized keys than a full layout on a laptop.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  110. Re:Put your money where your mouth is, and buy one by bemymonkey · · Score: 1

    Well, since 17" laptops no longer have higher resolutions than 1080p, why not just go with a 15.6" device with a 1080p screen? I'm typing this on a Thinkpad T520 right now, which is more or less what you describe, and has a very standard keyboard as far as laptop keyboards go. Separately grouped F1-F12 keys, grouped Home/End/PgUp/PgDn block and most important: Fully centered due to the lack of a num-block.

    https://www.google.com/search?q=thinkpad+t520&hl=de&safe=off&client=firefox-beta&hs=hus&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&prmd=imvns&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=0kiSUKjiDsbLhAeltIHYDw&ved=0CGUQsAQ&biw=1002&bih=1025&sei=1kiSUP6eOM7Iswbm2YCYBA

    The only thing that's missing is the higher-res screen - 2560x1600 on 15.6" at 100% (96DPI) scaling would be AWESOME...

  111. Re:Problem by pentadecagon · · Score: 1

    The ipad display was increased exactly by a factor of two to make the scaling of applications easier.

  112. Re:Complainer by redback · · Score: 1

    Bullshit.

    Go fuck yourself you ignorant apple fanboy.

  113. Re:Put your money where your mouth is, and buy one by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    You know what drives changes like this. People showing they will pay a premium to have it.

    The product has to exist first. I'd gladly pay the price of a standard laptop plus the price of one of these high-res tablets to get the two pieces of hardwaree married (assuming there's linux driver support), and that's a price premium in itself. Except it has to be made by anybody other than Apple - I can't support company that's aggressively using the courts to make my industry worse. OK, not HP either, they have a 24% failure rate, but that leaves a dozen other manufacturers.

    But ... so far as I can tell it doesn't exist. My laptop just crapped out so I'll probably get a $500 refurb with a crummy screen, hoping that when that one dies this product will exist. Maybe the tablet market can drive it into being a commodity part, the way HDTV ruined computer displays.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  114. Re:Put your money where your mouth is, and buy one by guidryp · · Score: 1

    The product has to exist first. I'd gladly pay the price of a standard laptop plus the price of one of these high-res tablets to get the two pieces of hardwaree married (assuming there's linux driver support), and that's a price premium in itself. Except it has to be made by anybody other than Apple - I can't support company that's aggressively using the courts to make my industry worse. OK, not HP either, they have a 24% failure rate, but that leaves a dozen other manufacturers.

    But ... so far as I can tell it doesn't exist. My laptop just crapped out so I'll probably get a $500 refurb with a crummy screen, hoping that when that one dies this product will exist. Maybe the tablet market can drive it into being a commodity part, the way HDTV ruined computer displays.

    Yes. I am sure there are companies that just can't wait to service it Anti-Apple, Anti-HP, Linux Users, who buy cheap refurbs, but assure us they are willing to spend big bucks if only someone that isn't one of the above companies would ship such a product complete with proper Linux drivers. That market must contain literally Dozens of potential sales.

    Keep waiting, I am sure they can't resist that market potential much longer.

  115. Re:Put your money where your mouth is, and buy one by thoth · · Score: 1

    Except there is NOWHERE for my money to go. I can't vote with my wallet, because every vendor makes the exact same fucking thing, without the slightest variation. This a total failure of the free market.

    Uh... this isn't a failure of the free market, this is more that the free market doesn't find serving your demands to be worthwhile. Sorry.

  116. Re:Put your money where your mouth is, and buy one by thoth · · Score: 1

    Sounds like the hardware support issues Linux has faced from the beginning, and somehow it happened.

  117. wuxga by spongman · · Score: 1

    i'd be happy with just WUXGA at 15", like they had back in '05.

  118. E-Ink Is Another Move I'd Be Happy With by canadiannomad · · Score: 1

    Don't get me wrong, I like high resolutions, but to be honest for my laptop I would much rather an EInk display. I know it won't be able to do video, but at least I could then use my laptop outdoors, by the beach, on my hammock... Talk about programmer job satisfaction going up... Longer battery life to boot, woot!

    --
    Hmm, the humour and sarcasm seem to have been be lost on you.
  119. Playing niicely by moonwatcher2001 · · Score: 1

    Linux doesn't play nicely with the Retina display :)

  120. LVDS standards - I can't believe no one mentioned. by nbritton · · Score: 1

    Hey everyone, the reason for this is real simple. LVDS (Low Voltage Differential Signaling) is limited to a maximum resolution of 1400 × 1050 @ 60Hz. Almost all of the laptop panels today interface with the chipset (i.g. Intel 4500MHD) using LVDS. It saves cost, the fact of the matter is that basically all LCD panels made today are driven using LVDS circuitry. HDMI, DVI, RGB, Component , S-Video, RCA, or whatever are merely device to device interconnects. Even TV's are driven internally using LVDS, it's just that they only need to run at 1080p @ 30 Hz; Linus is effectively asking for 1600p @ 60 Hz. That's well beyond the capabilities of an off the shelf commodity LVDS panel.

    Manufactures are listening Linus, and have created a new standard called Embedded DisplayPort (eDB). This is what's driving the panel in the new MacBook Pro actually, and now that Intel's new chipset lines support this technology we simply have to wait for economies of scale to bring the prices down on eDB panels. I'll bet at least half the new laptops sold with have eDB panels in them by this time next year... This would really make retailers happy for Christmas shopping.

  121. Make Your Own by Gallomimia · · Score: 1

    Linus, I cannot disagree with you at all. Standards should improve, not regress. However I have to put forward the suggestion that this is driven by the interests of computer makers, and not whats best for software makers such as yourself, nor anything to do with what consumers of such a market want. So, like the reasons to create an open-sourced operating system, the reasons for the consumer base to design and build its own hardware has never been stronger. I would encourage anyone reading this, and anyone in the linux environment of organizations, to get to work on making what has been discussed here a reality. Looking up at the discussions of data rates for resolutions such as this, can I suggest small microprocessors at either end of the links to give compression and decompression support to the display links? It can help, and latency shouldn't be a huge issue.

    --
    Sadly, a Libertarian cannot force his views on another, and freedom cannot spread as does the cancer known as religion.
  122. Appreciating photographs by docilespelunker · · Score: 1

    Indeed, it does seem silly that the laptop has enough ram and cpu to work on photographic pieces but here's no chance of appreciating them properly. On the other hand, my laptop was given to me so can't complain too much...

  123. Re:Complainer by RocketRabbit · · Score: 1

    There were no such things. There were HD+ (1920x1200) display laptops, but nothing approaching the Retina displays that exist now.

    It's painfully obvious that other manufacturers are racing each other to the bottom, which I think is why Apple had to be the company to put a really high-rez display in a really nice laptop.

  124. Double ironic by chromas · · Score: 1

    I'm old enough that I can't even do hipster fashion ironically

    But now you're old enough you can do ironic ironically.

  125. Re:Complainer by RocketRabbit · · Score: 1

    Please list the LCD panels that meet or exceed Apple's resolution, that are not bespoke $5000+ models. I can wait until 2014 if you want. I'm sure I'll be waiting long than that for you to come up with your imaginary wheezings.

    It's not my fault that Google had to copy every single thing they ever did, including their "premiere" shitware OS for cheap Chinese phones. Please don't be offended by the fact that Apple is the only company making a laptop sturdy enough to actually last, and certainly the only laptop with a decent trackpad.

    If you have anything useful to say, please come back and try again once you douche the rat-feces out of your stretched out cunt. Loser.

  126. all laptops should have touch screen as well ! by xchg.ca · · Score: 1

    all laptops should have touch screen as well !

  127. Re:Complainer by randyleepublic · · Score: 1

    Don't you mean "manufacturer's"?

    --
    Social Credit would solve everything...
  128. Re:There is high-res light at the end of the tunne by themusicgod1 · · Score: 1

    They haven't "caught up" with the bandwidth requirements because they've been too busy pushing DRM and "customer frustration" down your throat.

    --
    GENERATION 26: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
  129. I wonder if you could replace the LCD by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

    its a pitty LCDs arent a standard connector, or are they, can you swap a good old lcd into a new laptop?

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    1. Re:I wonder if you could replace the LCD by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      From what I've seen, they're more 'semi-standard'.

      The connector isn't too bad, but you're going to have to make sure that the new laptop matches the dimensions of the old screen, can support the power draw(modern screens do draw less), uses the 'right' connector, and the hinge mounts match up correctly.

      Even then you're most likely going to have mismatched casings.

      It's probably easier to simply pay the price to get a new laptop that still has the higher resolution.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
  130. Re:Put your money where your mouth is, and buy one by badkarmadayaccount · · Score: 1

    Don't forget portrait mode with a geometrically central mounting point for the display on a telescopic holder, flipback convertible into a tablet with acoustic standing wave Gorilla glass touchscreen, firewire or PoE charging, I don't know what SFP is, but Thunderbolt is more general. 4k display is overkill, be sure to use sequential colour generation LCoS with a fresnel lens - it's easy to construct a transflective configuration with complete internal reflection. Oh, and a big fucking antenna, fit for capturing satelite transmissions, just use half he screen case for a microsrip array. *fap* *fap*

    --
    I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.
  131. Re:Put your money where your mouth is, and buy one by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    Don't look now, but your ignorance is showing.

    I used to regularly spend $3K on Macbook Pros before Apple went corporately insane (and ran linux on them). If you knew what you were talking about you'd be familiar with the formerly large effort to support linux on Apple laptops. It was even a Fedora priority at one point.

    Now I'm hard-pressed to find a machine that offers reasonable specs, so the desire to spend much money is lacking. You'll see people here posting about the old Dells with high-res screens that they paid just as much for, and all that was when the market was 1/10th its current size. Lenovo for one makes Linux support available on at least most of its models. That's just because they like to waste money, I'm sure.

    And maybe Linus is just out of touch with the linux userbase. That could be ... nah, he's not.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  132. Re:Resolution vs Graphics cards by lpq · · Score: 1

    Printing standards long ago said that for books and most papers, 300dpi was reasonable. Now 600dpi and higher isn't uncommon. So for an 11inch laptop, that'd be 3300 dpi to get print quality -- That seems like a reasonable minimum for something you are expected to read daily.

    I'd say Torvalds 2560x1600 should be the new *low end*... not a high end ... as long as you are other consumers continue to be satisfied by less for more, you will get it.

    As for movies at 1080p... screens are being released in the US @ 3840x2160 for 8 foot screens.

    This compares with european and japanese releases 6-12 months ago of 4K-wide screens w/up to 4096x3072 sizing.

    The highest DPI I could find was released in June 2001 by IBM for a 22.2" 3840x2400 @ 18K$, everything since then has been downhill as our technology standards have declined...

  133. Dumbed down by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 2

    I think the problem is that to the average consumer, technical specs like "1920x1200 resolution" are meaningless. Other products have been dumbed down too. Instead of being impressed that a pair of speakers has flat frequency response up to 22kHz, the dumbed-down consumer looks for "ooh, that thingie looks kewl and it has a dock so i think it'll play music from my ipod." And instead of being impressed by a politician who actually grasps the implications of our entitlement programs having $100 trillion in unfunded liabilities, they vote for... you get the idea.

    --
    That that is is that that that that is not is not.
  134. More pivoting displays, please by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't it be nice if pivoting displays had caught on more? Landscape orientation is perfect for watching videos, then rotate it 90 degrees and it's the perfect aspect ratio for word processing/coding.

    --
    That that is is that that that that is not is not.
  135. Re:Wow. Do you actually believe that? by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 1

    Damnit. I have mod points, but I've already posted in this thread.

    +1 Bouhahahahaha