My in-use, non-TV displays add up to (diag.):
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Odd Binning (Score:5, Insightful)
15" or less: Small to mid laptops
15-30": Mid-to-large laptops, CRT displays, most LCDs
30-60": Most two-monitor setups of any main/old monitor size, and high end LCDs
60-90": Presumably 2-4 monitors, depending on quality, and some solo tv-as-monitor setups
More than 90": Presumably above 3-5 monitors, depending on quality; 3+ large LCDs, or 5+ 18" CRTs, along with more exotic displays, such as projectors
Given the vague wording of the question, it also lacks any kind of distinguishment between multiple single-headed computers, and lone multi-monitor setups, which seem like very different usage cases to me. My two ancient 18" CRTs, one standalone and the other the head of a KVM switch, leaves me rubbing shoulders with the $1000+ single-LCD users.
Adding area by diagonals? (Score:5, Insightful)
The other tricky thing that comes into play is aspect ratio. Two screens with the same diagonal measurement, but different aspect ratios, will have different areas. So if I add an old 20" 4:3 CRT to a new 24" 16:9 LCD I get
Re:Adding area by diagonals? (Score:4, Insightful)
I think the rest of us saw this as just a reason to compare penis's. Not trying to figure out mathmatically how much screen area we have. In general a larger diag means more space. But yes, technically someone with 20 1"x2" screens (40") has less than someone with a single 20"x24 (480")