Super Large, Super Hi-Res LCD Screens? 197
"I did some digging and found that while the VP181 is advertised as having a maximum resolution of 1600x1200, its native resolution is a piddly 1280x1024 (every image I've seen so far is intended to be displayed on a device with square pixels, and 1280x1024 crams a 5:4 resolution into a 4:3 space resulting in squished pixels) and the higher res is just emulated. Then there's the 17.3-inch SGI 1600SW, which does 1600x1024, but I understand it locks you into a specific video card and the product is no longer supported. Every once in a while we hear about new flat panel technologies being developed (IBM developed the QX20, a 20.8-inch, 2048x1536 LCD (this was last year. Where is it now?). Then there's the 22" Apple Cinema Display, which can do 1600x1024, but it's made by Apple, and I'm not quite so sure about that one."
Re:Actually, ADC isn't proprietary... (Score:1)
SGI Flat Panel (Score:1)
Its an excellent monitor, especially price competitive to other monitors, and the resolution (110 dpi) is tighter than anything coming out over the next 2 years.
I haven't heard about SGI discontinuing support for the product... you might want to contact them directly. I have a feeling though that in the next year, they will either introduce a new flat panel that will work with the standard DVI interface... or they will end up dropping the product line all together.
eBay always seems to have a few available for bids as well... but the price tends to get up towards $2000 - still quite less than retail.
Hardware Hackerz to the Rescue (Score:1)
Buy one of those Apple monitors and send it to me and I will hack it to work on your computer for $20.
I even got a 15w soldering iron, solder, liquid flux, a Dremel, solder wick, solder sucker and other lab stuff for this I-Opener thing, so I am really set to hardware hack just like a factory. But I ended up frying the USB and some other stuff, so I got free practice for you. If you want it send another $200 and will send it back with your monitor.
I don't want my info posted on
Don't send cash, use PayPal an I will give you a discount later. Don't forget to add for shipping too, bekuz I have a low margin that is too low for the UPS truck to drive under. Lotsa big companies don't ecksplain that to people and rip them off really bad, but we are real honest since we are doing lots of business so people will trust us real good. So your money is safe. We even got a guarantee for it.
Sinserely,
ODK Team
WhitHatHardwareHackerz, Inc.
P.s., the old guy next door is in a movie [dorsai.org] and he lets us sleep over and drink all the time.
Viewsonic actually does have the correct aspect (Score:1)
Apple Display (Score:1)
Mark Nelson
Re:Problems with LCD (Score:1)
If you can't stand the thin black lines on a Trinitron display, I don't know how you can stand an LCD display.
I detest the trinitron display's lines, but I use my 14.1" notebook every day and don't notice any blocking. Glasses are recent and keep everything in focus so I know I can see the grid effect. (in fact I do if I sit 6" in front of the screen) I prefer my 14.1" LCD to my 17" Philips 107s @ 1280x1024 (no flicker, just not as clear as the LCD)
Re:16:9 aspect ratio w/ 1600x1200 resolution? (Score:1)
Re:NEC LCD2110 Rocks (Score:1)
Woah! For that money, Apple will give you their cinema display, plus their top-of-the-line G4 to run it with:
$7,598.00
I can't find a picture of that NEC, but I'm willing to bet it doesn't look as good as the Cinema Display.
Re:SGI Display (Score:1)
Apple Cinema Display with Linux???? (Score:1)
Thought of SGI screens? (Score:1)
These can work with as PC using a special graphics card from Oxygen, I believe.
Not sure if they can be fixed up to hang from a wall, but for a desktop they get my vote.
Re:Thought of SGI screens? (Score:1)
Re:i got it suckers (Score:1)
Just because this person did not like the actions of one chapter does not mean that all chapters are the same. It also does not give this person the reason or the right to post the most important documents of the orgainization.
In case the person that owns the site does not know, what he/she did was also copyright infringement. A person in my chapter has already contacted the national office and they will be contacting the owner of the site soon.
Please people, act like adults and don't take vengence on something that you obviously do not understand.
To the owner of the comment I am replying to, the second half of this reply was not intended directly for you...but I felt I had to let everyone know...
Re:i got it suckers (Score:1)
Re:SGI Display (Score:1)
* 17.3" display
* 1600x1024 resolution
* 0.23mm DP (110 DPI)
* US$2475 @ buy.com
SGI Flat Panel Information (from daily use) (Score:1)
It does have a nice aspect ratio, but there are SEVERAL problems to it as well. For one, when used in anything but 1600x1024 you get a 'framed' screen with black bars and useless space. Further the NumberNine card really needs to have some improvements to it, as it can create pixelated sub-groupings on the screen in solid color fields especially at high resolution blow-ups (take a picture, any format, and blow it up a few hundred percent. you'll suddenly notice blocks of 4x4 or 8x8 pixels becoming off-color for no reason, while reproduced correctly on a CRT).
I do graphic production as part of my living, and I prefer the ColorSync monitor next to the SGI lcd for color rendering. Once I saw one of the Apple 22" flat panels I was amazed at how handily it beat the SGI I had on my desktop, but alas it was chained to the countertop so I couldn't take it back to compare directly
Apple Display (Score:1)
22 cinima display [apple.com]and some features [apple.com]
You dont mention your computer preference(although you allude to a distrust of Apple), or what the final use of the monitor will be for(sound like you want a nice tv), so pick up a cube and one of these, and youll have your tv/dvd player. And if you ever can trust apple on one thing for, its a product with good color reproduction
Re:Hot Off of the Press... (Score:1)
Re:Hot Off of the Press... (Score:1)
If I remember correctly, resolution should be at minimum the wavelength of light in the visible spectrum (although it varies).
Re:Samsung (Score:1)
2048x1536 @80hz max resolution.
1600x1200 @85hz recommended resolution.
.24 dot pitch.
Flat Sony trinitron screen.
The Gimp is mind-blowing on this thing. Text looks decent, too. Really shows off enlightenment. If you're jealous of those 1600x1200 e.themes.org screenshots, this one might be the ticket. Not too heavy, either -- only about 60 lbs.
(Note, the price dropped right after I got it -- $733 now [cnet.com]. Hint for shoppers: you have to consider the shipping which is usually $40 for a large item like this and can run to $80. soft4u.com seems to have the best price right now at $733.53 and free shipping.)
Re:The SGI FlatPanel 1600SW (Score:1)
Buy.com has brand new 1600SWs with the multilink adapter included (expensive item -- lets you hook up a number of different video cards) for $1900 and change.
16:9 aspect ratio w/ 1600x1200 resolution? (Score:1)
(bitch, moan, whine...:)
Re:Samsung (Score:1)
Don't they teaching "reading the subtext" in high school any more?
Re:DFW Airport Car Rental Center (Score:1)
Re:LCDs (Score:1)
The only problem is the weight and the size. The thing is a real bitch to haul around to LAN parties.
New NEC-Mitsubishi does 1600x1200 natively (Score:1)
the NEC-Mitsubishi LCD2110, a 21.3" monitor that is claimed will begin shipping in October.
NEC estimates [necmitsubishi.com] the street price to be around $7999.
The only site I've found that advertises [saleonall.com] it listed it for $8273.92, but
as "call for availability." ZDNet estimates [zdnet.com] the price to be $9999.
Re:Graphic Quality - extensive test results (Score:1)
You might get trouble with the Cinema display because of the aspect ration, but if you can pay that for a display you can buy a 2nd one in a more normal resolution for quake.
Re:Samsung (Score:1)
I had a Samsung 170MP for a little while. It was beautiful and exactly what I wanted, but I eventually sent it back because I couldn't get rid of pixel jittering. (Analog inputs only.)
And now I'm sensitized to jittering. I can notice annoying jittering in the annoying fuzzy dots on my Nokia CRT too.
I don't sit at my desk much any more. I geek from a Dell Inspiron laptop, 1400x1050. Crisp dots, no ghosting, no jittering, good scaling. The downside is I get to see all sorts of jpeg compression artifacts that aren't visible on a CRT.
Next desktop monitor I get will have digital inputs.
The Ultimate display: laser projection (Score:2)
The bottom line:
Basic unit: $500,000. Quantity discounts available.
Actually, ADC isn't proprietary... (Score:2)
The standard never caught on, it seems. I don't know why; IMHO it makes a lot of sense. Then again, it seems very few standards get popular until Macs start including them on all its machines. Witness USB, which existed but was languishing in no-peripheral-support limbo until the iMac came along and gave it the boost it needed.
----------
Re:Actually, ADC isn't proprietary... (Score:2)
----------
Re:SGI Display (Score:2)
It appears that an i128 driver was checked into the XFree86 CVS tree recently, so a future 4.x release will probably support the Revolution IV-FP.
I don't think there's yet support for the 3DLabs Oxygen VX1-1600SW, though. (Anybody know of a store in the UK that sells the SGI monitor + 3DLabs card and that lets you order online? Yes, the UK - I want to buy one from the US and have it delivered to an address in the UK.)
Re:SGI now works with other video cards (Score:2)
It's also supported by the 3DLabs Oxygen VX1-1600SW [3dlabs.com]. I don't know whether that card's better than the #9 Revolution IV-FP or not. (Presumably one reason SGI switched is that #9 is out of business....)
One has been checked into the XFree86 CVS tree, so some future 4.x release will probably support it.
I don't think there's currently any XFree86 4.x support for the VX1-1600SW, but it may appear in the future.
...although, as I read SGI's FAQ on the MultiLink Adapter [sgi.com] and, in particular, the answer to "What happens if my card is not SuperWide savvy?" [sgi.com], you don't get 1600x1024 unless you have a "SuperWide Savvy" adapter - and you may need driver support for that; see the SuperWide Savvy page [sgi.com].
Re:SGI Display (Score:2)
Unless the colored plastic can turn a 17.3-inch (diagonal) display [sgi.com] into a 22-inch (diagonal) display [apple.com], I doubt that the Apple Cinema Display is a colored-plastic-covered SGI 1600SW.
Re:The SGI FlatPanel 1600SW (Score:2)
It was recently checked into the XFree86 CVS tree (I don't know if it works yet, all I know is that it was checked in).
New Idea (Score:2)
IBM 200ppi LCD monitor (Score:2)
From what I recall of the original IBM project page, this beast was designed to be as readable as printed text in a book.. basically the images are sharper, less blurry than current CRT/LCD technology, which typically has 80/100 ppi. This is something to watch out for, I think.
Re:The SGI FlatPanel 1600SW (Score:2)
As a long-time owner of two SGI 1600SW panels, I have only one response to the news of the Multilink adapter:
Yeeeeeeeeeessssssssssssssssss!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The Nine is just fine for 2D graphics, but sucks rocks for 3D (especially OpenGL).
I recently assembled a game machine with a GeForce card, and I'd love to be able to move the SGI to it.
Re:Hot Off of the Press... (Score:2)
This is different then maximum resolution, though of course if your eye can't focus, then your maximum resolution will be severly limited.
Wrong. (Score:2)
Re:WHY can't they put two LCD screens side-by-side (Score:2)
The suggestion was. I believe, to join LCD displays edge-to-edge so there is no gap.
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
Re:The SGI FlatPanel 1600SW (Score:2)
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
LCDs (Score:2)
There are plenty of 21" and 19" monitors that don't flicker at 1600x1200. I went for one of those in the end, a flat-screen Sony, and I'm very happy.
I'm sure big LCDs will be more viable in a few years time. In the meantime, I'd rather save my money for some other toy.
Samsung (Score:2)
Re:New Idea (Score:2)
Heck.. why not just manufacture individual subpixels and then glue them toegether? you could ship someone's monitor to them in a bucket as a 'do it yourself' kit.
IN all seriuosness, it comes down to how do you join those elements together cleanly enough? The reason tehy are built as a single piece is because it's the only way to get the pixels small enough and close enough together.
Re:Buy an LCD projector (Score:2)
Bulbs are the killer. $500 a piece for ultra high pressure sodium bulbs.
Re:Nope (Score:2)
Color reproduction is still more accurate on a monitor..
And.. although it's fact that digital input to an LCD is accurate.. it is also less versatile until the digital connector is standard.
Creates problems with anything that does video passthru (like DVD decoders and such).
Best Bet is to wait (Score:2)
Re:Forget the Cinema Display (Score:2)
Re:Unfortunately, Apple's display looks perfect (Score:2)
For that matter, the G400 specs don't list 1600x1024 for the DVI daughtercard, but SGI lists it under their SuperWide Savvy list and a search of the Matrox support forums has responses from Matrox tech support claiming the G400 will drive 1600x1024.
Incidentally, I know some people love the SGI 1600SW, but IMHO, a 17" monitor running 1600x1024 is just painfully small. We had a couple at the last place I worked and I didn't think they were so hot. Of course If I had spent $3k on one, I might find reasons to think that ;)
square pixels? (Score:2)
Apple Cinema Display info (Score:2)
The input is TMDS [ddwg.org] from the Digital Display Working Group. Follow the link, hit product list, search for vendor and cards. (Be aware the the connector changed recently. New Cinema Displays have a combined power/video/usb connector, you may need a fancy cable to get into it from your video card.)
I have used a number of flat panel displays from different vendors. I must say the Apple ones are the best I've used, no exceptions. Its especially striking when an Apple display is next to another brand.
If you decide to buy one you should go by smalldog [smalldog.com]. You won't find a better reseller and they sell off refurbished Apple units at reduced cost. All my displays are refurbs, I've never had a problem.
Re:There's a cooler tech out there. (Score:2)
I looked at this technology a few years ago, and all the better portable "LCD" projectors out now are actually DLP units. There is *no* visible separation between pixels, unlike LCD or other systems, and the brightness is incredible - easily viewable in a daylit room.
At one point a year or two ago, the TI web site said that Nokia was planning a (40-ish inch) DLP-based TV, which while not a flat panel, was still planned to come in at only about a foot deep. I don't know what happened to this product, but it looks like Samsung beat tehm to that form factor with their new FLCD TV.
(I do know that TI had real problems in getting the DLP chips to scale up in resolution - they were stuck at 6x4 and 8x6 for a long time... (Yes, that's 640x480 and 800x600, really - it's a common abbrev. in the laptop business...)
Re:why lcds will never be cheap (Score:2)
More information about PALC, at least a nice picture and some details, can be found here:
www.meko.com/palc.html [meko.com]
As of last December, the three companies appeared to still be developing the technology [stanfordresources.com].
Forget the Cinema Display (Score:2)
why lcds will never be cheap (Score:2)
Re:Samsung (Score:2)
It was supposed to look good because the video never went through an analog stage. I've been wondering if DVD on a laptop has the same advantage? Does the video go through an analog stage before getting to the LCD display?
What about an LCD display on a desktop monitor with digital input? Anyone watched a DVD on one of those?
What about these dedicated handheld and larger, DVD players? All digital?
Does anyone make a Plasma, rather than LCD display for computers? I've seen the 'used to be $10,000 now around $3,000' consumer video versions, but never in a desktop monitor. One of the things I don't like about LCD dispays is the speed at which pixels can be turned on and off. Plasmas seem to do that much faster, and consequently have snappier, cleaner, video during scenes with lots of motion.
************************************************** *****
PBS Documentary on the 30 year War on Drugs tonight! 2 part special [pbs.org], tonight and tomorrow night.
Seems like this affects as many geek's lives as, say, LEGO robots, or Start Wars trailers....
I wonder if they'll mention that one of the candidates for president [harrybrowne2000.org] wants to end it.
Couple of video clips here [pbs.org] and here [lp.org].
Samsung 24'' looks nice. (Score:2)
A mouth-watering picture of the new Samsung 24'' LCD [samsung.de]. Was just tested in lastest (?!) issue of C't (germanies only computer magazine)
Here are the technical details. [samsung.de]
Cheers,
Chris
Try an LCD Projector instead (Score:2)
I haven't tried to measure the dimensions (Kinda depends on the distance you can get it from your screen)
It is great.
I can plug my DVD system into, my Laptop can connect to it, and it's got USB connectors so you can control your mouse through the remote control.
It can deal with PAL and NTSC.
Quake III is NICE!
All you need is a big White wall (or projector screen) good curtains/blinds, oh and about 2000UKP sterling (I bought mine in April, so the price may have come down since then).
So, 20" + screen - check; Hang on the wall - er-check; $3000 - check!
I think you're all out of excuses...
ys
Re:Hot Off of the Press... (Score:2)
This is the reason why some of the contact lens companies are making a big deal about "better than 20-20" correction: the contact lens can correct the imperfect lens of the eye to a point where near-optimal focus is achived.
Additionally, some researchers are looking into using active optics to bring focus in the eye to the limits of diffraction: in fact, the focus so achivied is so fine, that a HeNe laser (red, 632.8 nm) can be perceived as green, IF the spot falls on a green cone, rather than a red cone. In short, our vision system does not approach the limits of diffraction, but is limited by the accuraccy of focus of the lens.
Re:Hot Off of the Press... (Score:2)
Apple LCDs (Score:2)
Its true, Apple has the highest-quality LCDs out there. Theyre bright, crisp, and a pleasure to look at. It sounded in your post that you were knocking them, or at least that you were reluctant, simply because they were Apple.
Alien user-interface designs, insane business practices and an extra helping of hubris aside, Apple has always made superior hardware, bar none. (Okay, so there was that exploding Powerbook back in 1997 but hey, we ALL make a mistake [appleturns.com] from time to time).
Truth is, Apple is the first place I'd look for a display because I know it will last, and if it does't, that they will back it up. (And if it DOES break, maybe you'll get a phone call [appleturns.com] from Steve-O himself!)
You can use the new 15" and 22" displays on any graphics card with a DVI-out connector with a DVI-ADC adapter, availible now for about $15.
The last generation, which you should still have no trouble getting your hands on refurbished or even new, use DVI.
And if you wait another month or two, it is HIGHLY rumored Apple finally has a 17" or 18" display in the pipeline to fill the gaping chasm in their product line between 15-22". It will have a new case design and should be a beauty. Best of all it should be priced compeditively, about $1500.
--Xel
========
Re:Forget the Cinema Display (Score:2)
Re:Unfortunately, Apple's display looks perfect (Score:2)
NEC LCD2110 Rocks (Score:2)
I have found something that seems to be what you may be looking for -- the NEC LCD2110. 21.3" viewable, 1600x1200 native resolution. Link to the NEC press Release [yahoo.com].
There is a price sticker shock though - MSRP is $7999.
Minotaur Technologies [minotaur.com], the company that I own sells it for $7595 [minotaur.com]. Free shipping!
Buy an LCD projector (Score:2)
If you want a resolution higher than 1280x1024 native then buy two of them with a dual-head video card and align the images to make a seamless display. This would be very cool.
Jason.
Arrrrrrghh! (Score:2)
Must resist temptation... Must not read such articles... must not buy huge lcd screen.. must buy clothes... arrrrrrrrgh!
(Can slashdot have a "disable-temptation-and-bankrupcy-causing-articles " button?
Re:Hot Off of the Press... (Score:2)
p = c*l/D
where D is diameter of aperture, l is wavelength of light and c is a constant (1.22 may be?). p is in radians.
Re:Hot Off of the Press... (Score:2)
Re:Unfortunately, Apple's display looks perfect (Score:2)
The ADC-DVI adapter at the Apple Store allows you to connect an ADC Computer (Cube) to a DVI monitor (Cinema Display). As far as I can tell, it does not allow you to connect a ADC monitor to a DVI computer (old G4 or a PC).
Re:Unfortunately, Apple's display looks perfect (Score:2)
The question still is: Can you just turn around the Apple adapter and do DVI to ADC?
Wait a while longer (Score:2)
The Apple Cinema Display, the 22-inch one, is made by LG in Korea. LG makes some pretty good stuff, but having worked with LCD panels from LG and Philips for a while, I have to say, I am waiting just a bit longer.
Why?
Two things are coming that will make a big difference in the quality of the display.
There are other things, like new forms of backlighting that are brighter and longer-lasting, and new ways of designing the dot layout on the glass. Let's not forget front-lighting, which is already available and makes for a much better image.
Besides all this, LCDs are still expensive and not that great in general. Once LCDs make it into televisions, the production costs will come down as the yields come up (they will have to!), and it may be possible to have a nice, large LCD computer monitor for the price of a large CRT today. It better be possible, anyway.
DFW Airport Car Rental Center (Score:2)
Anyone travel to Dallas often enough to get the brand names?
I think... (Score:2)
There's a cooler tech out there. (Score:2)
The tech I'm excited about is that one pioneered by Texas Instruments, (of all players!) The one which uses an array of micro-mirrors that you reflect a light from onto a screen.
They're already using this for theatrical film releases in some test markets. It looks awesome. (I actually forced myself to sit through a showing of 'Mission to Mars' to preview this system.)
When I can project my computer screen onto my wall, (and back up my hard drive on to 30gig phosphorescent CDR disks), then I'll finally be happy with the state of affairs in the computer world.
Probably won't become available for the lowest common denominator, though. Reflected light is too passive. You can't play Black-Ops team and scan a room from a white van like you can with CRT rays. (Paranoia, Paranoia. . .) I expect the dominant tech will end up being something that bathes us with rays, in order to keep the secret government happy!
-Fantastic Lad
Gentlemen, we have the technology to rebuild this man, but let's dick around and act like children and not actually do it for another decade, Okay?
Re:Plasma Display (Score:2)
Re:Only one MAJOR problem with LCD displays... (Score:2)
Unfortunately, Apple's display looks perfect (Score:2)
Is there any info on using the display with a non-Apple product?
On the other hand, the question doesn't give us enough info on why the Apple display wouldn't work for him/her?
The nick is a joke! Really!
Definitions of functionality (Score:2)
IE, if Apple decided to eliminate cables altogether in their nextgen G4 tower by going wireless (wireless USB, keyboard, mouse, speakers), the added functionality is *zero* clutter, zero confusion, zero space loss.
The nick is a joke! Really!
Graphics Quality (Score:2)
--
Chief Frog Inspector
Re:Apple and Sony and pretty much your only choice (Score:2)
This is a difficult question to answer. Apple assemble's them (or contracts out) from parts and adds custom boards (ColorSync, for example). It's the custom boards and their choice of only using high quality parts that make them stand out. Their color accuracy is astounding, expecially considering that all of the color calibration is done in internal hardware.
Re:Forget the Cinema Display (Score:2)
Apple and Sony and pretty much your only choices. (Score:2)
Re:WHY can't they put two LCD screens side-by-side (Score:2)
Re:Apples make toast... (Score:2)
> (Cube?), and plug that 22" LCD in?
> Okay, before you flame me - I know, I know... > They have no floppy drive (!), and the company > spends
i'm happy that the cube doesn't have floppy drives. i'd be happy enough to buy one if:
- it was a *dvd-ram* device (dvd-rom would have seemd cool in 1996 or so)
- it also lacked a hard drive (and used the resulting xtra space for a couple of pci slots)
- that is, if it was a "info-toaster appliance" instead of a weird attempt at a mini-micro-computer....
add those features and continue to tout it as a digital video port and apple has something imho...
--oxo
A good video card will scale. (Score:3)
The result is that the lower resolution are 100% usable. To be honest, I don't even know why vendors implemented the old stretching method at all. It looked so crappy as to be useless. I always turned it off, and just had the display use the center 640x480 pixels with a huge black border. At least then I could read things.
However, I don't know if this solution is available outside of laptops. It is a function of the video chipset, and I don't know if the desktop ATI's implement it. I also don't know how it would work with the VGA connection that most LCD displays use. I wouldn't be suprised if it didn't. But, if you get a laptop with the ATI Rage Mobility, you won't have this problem. However, you might want to check for a BIOS setting to let you turn the stretching off on your laptop. All the one's I've used have had an option for this. The 1:1 mapping isn't great because it's so small, but at least it looks OK.
Only one MAJOR problem with LCD displays... (Score:3)
Aliasing.
And it looks like crap.
I have a 2 year old laptop with a LCD screen of 1024x768. You switch to a resolution like 640x480 and you have TERRIBLE aliasing problems. The video card scales the 640 pixels up to the same physical width as the 1024, and the 480 up to the same physical height as the 768 instead of just doing a 1:1 scale and having the 640x480 image shrink. Now, since you need 1.6 pixels across and down (1024/640 = 768/480 = 1.6 scaling) and the LCD screen doesn't have fractional LCD's you end up with very bad aliasing artifacts.
Analog tubes do NOT have this problem. (They have temporal aliasing, but that's another discussion
For most uses, you just leave the LCD screen running at max (highest) resolution and it's not an issue. But playing, or developing games, on a LCD, and unfortunately the problem shows up.
I love the cleaner and sharper look of the LCD screen. It seems to be easier on the eyes. I would switch over to LCD screens in a second, if this is non-issue nowadays.
Have "modern" LCD screens fixed this scaling problem?
Cheers
--
"Those who fail to learn from the past, are condemned to repeat it" - paraphrasing George Santayana
SGI now works with other video cards (Score:3)
Dell 1600 X 1200 screen on a laptop? (Score:3)
Wait (Score:3)
Hot Off of the Press... (Score:3)
ArtistInc has some very major selling points in their special project code-named Painting. It has an infinite maximum resolution, with the average being 6 feet wide by 4 feet long. When asked about Flicker the CEO demonstrated the project in front of a large group -- one person their commented that "It looked like it was real and right in front of my face."
One possible problem with this new technology is that it is incompatible with turpentine.
Re:The SGI FlatPanel 1600SW (Score:4)
(Someone please mod this information up as it's fairly important to combat the misinformation raised in the extended posting.)
The SGI 1600SW is definitely still sold an supported and still winning awards. With the fairly new MultiLink Adapter [sgi.com] it is no longer necessary to have special video cards -- absolutely any VGA signal capable of doing 60 Hz refresh can drive the screen.
Keep in mind however that a standard VGA signal will go through an analog stage so you lose some of the theoretically possible crispness of pure digital. To keep pure digital you would indeed need one of the supported digital cards.
Here's a set of questions and answers [sgi.com] about the 1600SW and the MultiLink Adapter.
I just wish I had one on my desk!
Re:Wrong. (Score:4)
FWIW, the Cinema Display is the biggest on the market, and it has a truly stunning image. Very, very high contrast. You've got to actually look at these things
Re:Samsung (Score:4)
Yes, I like the Samsung SyncMaster 770TFT [samsungelectronics.com] as well (and am using it now!), but the poster asked for;
So it doesn't really fit the bill, does it?
I think the poster need the SyncMaster 1100p+ [samsungelectronics.com]. It has
but it is still a standard 15-pin connector. A USB option is apparently available, but I'm guessing (does anybody know?) that it involves a converter :-)
Unfortunately I have no experiences with this monitor, but if somebody would lend me a sample.....
WHY can't they put two LCD screens side-by-side?? (Score:4)
Everyone knows that the reason LCD screens are expensive is that they have to be made as a single piece, and the larger the piece the more likely that a few pixels are out causing them to have to throw the whole mess away.
What on earth is stopping them from producing a bunch of those little gameboy color screens, or maybe even something cheaper, and placing them side-by side??
You would be able to have a TV the size of your whole living room wall where you could place various channels, perhaps even nature settings. Add a touch sensor and you could even have the worlds coolest (and largest) white board.
And the price should be relativly trivial--probably under $1000/wall for the LCDs, a bit more for the control hardware.
If something like this was available, I would even forgive a little bit of a line or border where two LCDs meet (Hell, putting 4 TVs side-by-side to show one ballgame looks pretty cool, this would be MUCH better than that).
Anyway, anyone out there know why?
Re:WHY can't they put two LCD screens side-by-side (Score:4)
Good question, and in fact, it's been done [massmultiples.com]. And discussed in this slashdot article. [slashdot.org] It's not exactly what you describe, and costs well more than $1000/wall, but it's in the right direction.
Warning! Monty Python follows! (Score:4)
My name is 11223.
And what is your quest?
I seek the holy grail of flat-panel technology!
And what is the ModeLine of an ATI Rage Fury Pro with DVI connector neccessary to hook up to an Apple Cinema Display?
Uhh.. uhh... I don't know... Aieeee!
Ooh, interesting response! (Score:4)
USB is a 4 wire standard; 2 for power/ground and 2 for signal. All you add to the ADC then would be the 2 signal wires, assuming that there is hardware on the monitor end and the PC end to handle the power conversion (as opposed to having 2 sets of power on the cable, though stupid engineering could very well have allowed for that as well). This is speculation on my part.
So you can conceivably get rid of the wiring and shielding necessary for the power, if it rides along the same line as the monitor's power lines.
You don't get an argument that it will take more engineering to get the wires, at different clocks, shielded, flexible, and working. On the other hand a new solution was needed for next generation displays, at least as defined by VESA, due to the fact that clock/refresh was increasing, display size/resolution was increasing, and the old VGA cables could not handle the bandwidth, limited at 150MHz, to the 2GHz limit of the newer interface.
See <a href="http://www.vesa.org/news81798.html">this page</a> for more info.
Your second point is also noted; but it is definitely an engineering solution, and not one that is insurmountable. I suspect Apple's future plan is to integrate Firewire as well into the cable, and produce a product with only one cable out the back:
ADC.
Speakers would migrate to USB, which collapses into the ADC, while video, firewire, and power are also provided by the ADC(Advanced Display Connector, if it's adopted outside of Apple, I would hope). Networking, of course, would be wireless.
And it isn't the cable that your saving money on; it's the ports and complexity and chipsets on the motherboard that get condensed. Say future PCI/AGP chipsets collect USB and FireWire functionality onto them. Instead of 3 or 4 chips, you now have 1 chip running all four functions. Instead of 3 ports, you now have one. Engineering wise, this makes placement and layout easier, I think, as well as heat disippation and traces simpler.
This has nothing to do with the stupidity of the user, though stupid people definitely benefit/gain from this arrangement. It is a convenience thing too. One less cable to package and ship. One less cable to test and try. One less cable to produce and buy. A $2 cable, a $1 in chips, $3 in ports, across a million machines => $6 million not spent. And since Apple seems to be shipping in the millions a year, I don't think saving $10-20 million is something one can laugh at easily...
Considering that's 250 engineers for a year of about $80k, it would be worth it if it cost 5 engineers 3 years of development time to design/implement this, at $100k salaries. One year of sales, if it's even close to $6mil saved, is enough to warrant the cost/difficulty in implementation.
My numbers are pure guesswork and rough numbers, nothing scientific. But on cost analysis, it isn't *outrageous* for Apple to implement something like this...
On the user end, it really is 2 less cables: Instead of video, power, and USB, it is only ADC.
So it may not be such a big deal on our end...
The nick is a joke! Really!
The SGI FlatPanel 1600SW (Score:5)
With a Number Nine Rev 4-FP (Do they make these anymore?) 1600x1024 @ 32-bit color really kicks ass in X. What I like most is that it's unusually crisp and very clear... I can read small text from a few feet away.
People have already mentioned that X 4.0 hasn't had the Number Nine drivers ported over, but that's trivial--I know they are working on this.
In any case, the SW-1600 is unbeatable. They just had a deal over at sgi.com where they were selling a kind of "G3"-looking Flatpanel for something like $US 1,699. It normally sells for $3,000 and I think they throw in a card too, a 16 MB Formac if you have a Mac, or a 32 MB Oxygen VX1-1600SW if you have a PC (Oxygen VX1-1600SW is not supported under X, unfortunately, not even with Xig's (www.xig.com) Oxygen VX1 driver.) But so what? Sell it (Value=$400) and get a Number Nine Revolution 4-FP instead.
So, that's about a 3,500 value which they are selling for 1,699. And no, I don't work for SGI, it's just that I think that this FlatPanel LCD is the best. (And believe me, I've looked.)
For price versus quality, I think this deal is quite good--if the deal is still there. (http://www.sgi.com/flatpanel).
Even so, I would shell out $5000 for this monitor, because I can't live with anything else anymore. I know most people don't have the money for this, but apparently the poster of this story does.
Hope this helps.
Plasma Display (Score:5)
For our Y2K party we set it up to use Ryan Geiss' Winamp Plugin [geisswerks.com] as a nice conversion piece.
Of course it costs around $13999.95...
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