
Recommendations and Reviews for > 20" Monitors? 19
Yet Another Anonymous Coward asks: "I'm in the market for a new monitor, and am considering a 20"-21". The problem is that I've had trouble getting much information about them; the local computer stores tend to max out at 19", as do the a lot of the reviews I've found in magazines and on the Web. The reviews I have found on the Web are contradictory in some cases, and for the most part are gamer sites which only have reviews for one or two large monitors, so it is hard to get a sense of relative "goodness". I'm particularly interested in text clarity at high resolutions, but gaming quality is a runner up. "
Word up. (Score:1)
Got it for $500 too. Sweet deal.
- A.P.
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"One World, one Web, one Program" - Microsoft promotional ad
Good Less Expensive Monitor (Score:1)
Re:Good Less Expensive Monitor (Score:1)
- Mike
Also check out... (Score:1)
Re:Also check out... (Score:1)
CTX is good (Score:1)
Second that (Score:1)
Additionally, I bought a fairly pricey computer when I bought the monitor (PII 400 approaching 2 years old now), but i skimped somewhat on the PC in favor of the huge Sony trinitron and it was worth it. While the PC is somewhat dated compared to the fastest machines out there now, I will be using and enjoying this monitor for years to come as my primary display.
Spyky
Sony is the way to go. (Score:1)
I know Sony is making some awesome short-neck Trinitrons right now that are in the 21" range. However, they cost an arm and a leg.
You best bet is to do some research on manufactorer sites, and make a decision from their specs.
Check out Buy.com, they always have good prices.
Good luck,
EC
"...we are moving toward a Web-centric stage and our dear PC will be one of
Stay away from the Sony F500 (Score:1)
Objects near the corners always have a colored shadow above, below or at the sides, about 1 pixel at the worst places.
Check out this monitor test program [heise.de] (needs Java, it is supposed to be os-independent). It displays a collection of grids, color bars, patterns etc.
IBM P260 (Score:1)
Buy with a good return policy. (Score:1)
Re:Sony is the way to go. (Score:1)
Bottom line if you can justify the cost buy Sony. (And you don't have to switch XFConfig if you pinch a screen from a Sun workstation - they're Sony too).
Now all we have to do is get it past the bean-counters.
Re:Sony is the way to go. (Score:1)
The Sun part number is 530-2357-01
Be warned they're expensive so consider contacting a Sun-clone manufacturer.
Recommendations and Reviews for > 20" Monitors? (Score:1)
iiyama's are cool too (Score:1)
The only problem I have with mine ("just" a 19" 450, but the 510 is just as good) is that its name is almost impossible to spell right !
Something you should consider too is the quality of the graphics card. Low end board are quite weak in high resolutions. I've searched a bit around the net about the best choice and it seems that Matrox cards give the cleanest, sharpest image. I'm very happy with my G200. Definitely not a gamers card -- I don't like games --, but a great 2D card.
Stéphane
Trinitrons are flat Re:Iiyama VisionMasterPro 510 (Score:1)
The trinitron moniter is optically flat. That is one of the salient points of it's design. (I have a normal 17" and a trin. 17" here at the house, and trust me, you can see the difference.) This is not to knock Iiyama moniters, they're quite nice too. :^)
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Re:Good Less Expensive Monitor (Score:1)
large monitors (Score:1)
Iiyama VisionMasterPro 510 (Score:2)
I'm currently running it at 1600x1200 at 80Hz, and the text in an xterm with the "tiny" font is easily readable at normal viewing distance. The monitor could refresh even faster (100Hz at this resolution), but my Matrox Millennium can't. Likewise, 1800x1440 is readable but a little flickery at 68Hz. A newer video card would probably be awesome.
Two things made me nervous about buying. (1) The price on these larger monitors hasn't plummeted the way the 17" and 19" have, so if you want that extra couple of inches you're going to pay dearly. (2) I did a lot of reading and the general impression I got was that Iiyamas are great if you get a good one, but your chances of getting a lemon are about 1 in 10. So make sure the place you buy it from has a good return/exchange policy. If you go retail, ask them to hook it up in the store so you can check it out. (At these prices, you don't have to feel bad about making them work a little for a sale.) After the sale, Iiyama is reputed to have excellent service during the 3-year warranty period.