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p.1 #12 · Best 24" or 20" LCD for Macpro | |
christo™ wrote:
UCSB: Thanks, I missed the English link. Always nice to have another good research link, particularly for monitors -- those change so dramatically so fast it's hard to keep up. I've always been an NEC fan. Dumped about $20K into them in the CRT days (along with on hernia.)
A 12 bit directly programmable hardware LUT is a real key item. The unit was built to be calibrated.
I agree that a 26" monitor is really for group display at a bit of a distance, and if you back off a few feet, the fatter pixels don't matter. However, I sit up-close and personal on my image editing workstations, and I really want the finest pixel geometry I can get for that. I love my pro Sharp display except that it's 18", and I notice the fatter pixels relative to my 17 and 20 inch displays. So, I guess what you are saying is the NEC is ideal for a "show off" display.
CTYankee: I see what you're saying now that UCSB discussed the LUT issue. I'm a bit rusty with LCD's. I studied up a few years ago when I went nuts and moved all my computers to LCD. At that time the 11 bit LUT's in the Sharps were about the best one could get (and the two Sharps I have from that time are still gorgeous.)
Since you guys are so up to speed on the NEC displays, do they have a smaller display with the 1920x1200 resolution? As you may have noticed on another thread, I'm currently in the market for another display in that class. I wasn't thinking of spending so much, but if the NEC is that good, I'll wait a bit and go for it. I admit I'm a display junkie. As I always tell people when advising them on computers: don't bother buying the latest fastest processor, and you don't need to spend $500 on a video card (even $300 these days.) The one thing that is most worth forking over extra money for is the nicest, highest resolution display you can afford, even if it means cheaping out a bit on the computer right now because the display is by far the highest bandwidth interface between the human and the machine, by orders of magnitude, quality displays typically will last through at least two or three computer generations, and having a great display just plain makes the whole computer experience better.
1900x1200 resolution comes in two flavors mostly...23" (Apple) and 24". To get that resolution AND the quality of the NEC/Eizo series with the built in LUT you are going to pay for it. I've seen some people getting them for $850 (not sure where) so the $1200 list price is certainly not set in stone.
If you are an LCD junkie then I would wait for an LED display at that size. There are now 30" LED displays (or due soon). LED backlights are much better. Flourescent backlights are not as white, use much more power and contain mercury (environmentally bad, no effect on performance). Once they combine the quality of the NEC hardware with the LED backlight it will be another step in performance. Then getting the entire pipeline of data from 8 bit to 10 bit will be the next big step (lets go software developers!!).
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