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| Thread ID: 119035 | 2011-07-01 21:36:00 | Advantage of having and LED-based monitor? | Renmoo (66) | Press F1 |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 1213908 | 2011-07-01 21:36:00 | Hi all, I am looking at buying this monitor: www.ascent.co.nz and I am perplexed by the description "LED monitor". Does it mean the backlight is powered by LED? Any advantages / disadvantages behind that? Thanks Cheers :) |
Renmoo (66) | ||
| 1213909 | 2011-07-01 21:48:00 | Lower power consumption. Better contrast ration. And in theory it should last a few years longer... Also, IMO - that monitor is no good. The resolution is way too low for 18.5", that's the resolution I use on my 13.3" laptop. Go for a bigger monitor with a resolution of 1920x1080, you won't regret it. |
Cato (6936) | ||
| 1213910 | 2011-07-01 21:56:00 | And some (dont know if all), are mercury free. LED may mean its still an LCD, but it uses an LED backlight | Speedy Gonzales (78) | ||
| 1213911 | 2011-07-01 22:05:00 | Cato: I plan to connect that monitor to a USB port on my laptop via a USB-to-VGA port. I am not sure if a higher resolution can be supported in the first place. | Renmoo (66) | ||
| 1213912 | 2011-07-01 22:44:00 | Your laptop does not have VGA or even HDIM output? Weird. I'm pretty sure VGA won't work for 1920x1080. But perhaps this might help: www.wirednz.co.nz |
Cato (6936) | ||
| 1213913 | 2011-07-01 22:56:00 | Well you wont get 1920x1080 with that monitor. Since, it only goes to 1366x768 And according to the Viewsonic site it says: VGA up to 1366×768 Non Interlaced |
Speedy Gonzales (78) | ||
| 1213914 | 2011-07-02 00:34:00 | Apologies, I should have explained the situation better. At the moment I have got a dual-screen setup whereby my laptop screen serves as the primary display while an LCD monitor (which is connected to the laptop via the VGA port) provides a secondary display. I am thinking of adding a third screen to the current setup, and the only way this can be done is to provide another VGA output via a USB port. Both the laptop and the current LCD monitor are running at a resolution of 1366 * 768, which is the maximum resolution that can be achieved. If I get a higher resolution monitor, the icon and text sizes would look different from the other two screens. Cheers :) [Edit] Feel free to recommend an alternative LCD monitor that you think I should get. As long as it costs less than $190, I am fine with that. |
Renmoo (66) | ||
| 1213915 | 2011-07-02 01:18:00 | I dont think it'll matter what monitor you get (if you want 1920x1080). You maybe lucky to get one under $200. And VGA probably wont go to 1920x1080 anyway. And you may not get 1920x1080, unless the monitor's 20' + So, do you still want LED? Or LCD? You could get this (www.ascent.co.nz) but I dont think its got VGA. Its DVI It may also depend on WHAT resolutions the adapter supports, on what you can get |
Speedy Gonzales (78) | ||
| 1213916 | 2011-07-02 01:49:00 | Well you wont get 1920x1080 with that monitor. Since, it only goes to 1366x768 And according to the Viewsonic site it says: VGA up to 1366×768 Non Interlaced And this is why I said: Also, IMO - that monitor is no good. The resolution is way too low for 18.5", that's the resolution I use on my 13.3" laptop. Go for a bigger monitor with a resolution of 1920x1080, you won't regret it. Maybe you won't get 1920x1080 but you would get 1600x900. Both the laptop and the current LCD monitor are running at a resolution of 1366 * 768, which is the maximum resolution that can be achieved. If I get a higher resolution monitor, the icon and text sizes would look different from the other two screens. I don't agree with that. img20.imageshack.us IMO, there's no real difference (the fonts look slightly different due to them being different fonts). |
Cato (6936) | ||
| 1213917 | 2011-07-02 02:01:00 | The VGA on your laptop will support 25x16, why not just get a big LCD and do away with the laptop LCD? | SolMiester (139) | ||
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