Flat Screen Monitors Sales to Reign This Year 282
swimfastom writes "Yahoo! News reports that sales of flat-panel computer monitors will top sales of bulkier traditional models this year, signifying a long-expected turning point in the computer monitor market. Flat-panel screen sales are expected to grow at a 49-percent compounded annual growth rate from 2001 through 2006, giving them an 82-percent share of the desktop computer market."
NOT! (Score:5, Insightful)
and then you have that nasty problem with not running at the native resolutions...
Re:NOT! (Score:5, Insightful)
what ?!?! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:what ?!?! (Score:2)
LCDs are getting a lot better, though. A friend of mine got a Dell laptop with a GF2Go about 1-1.5 year ago, and I couldn't see any ghosting at all in RtCW, Allied Assault, or UT, though it does have a limited viewable angle. The el-cheapo 15" LCD I got for my dad doesn't have any viewable angle problems, though I haven't done any gaming on it, so I can't say if it suffers any ghosting problems or not.
Totally agree (was: NOT!) (Score:3)
Maybe we should go back to reporting sales statistics after they actually happen rather than the reverse?
Cheers,
-- RLJ
Sales Power of Experience (Score:3, Insightful)
Sales in DOLLARS not UNITS (Score:5, Insightful)
Sunny
Best thing about LCD monitors (Score:2)
Yes, the >17 are still way to expensive, and I would be happy to pay a few hundred less for a one the size I have now, but the difference in cost is now small enough to justify the advantages (depending on importance to you, of course).
Re:NOT! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:low refresh rate (Score:5, Informative)
The 60hz number on an LCD is confusing, try thinking about it like 60FPS. 60FPS high enough that most people see smooth movement anyhow, so it's quite sufficient.
Re:low refresh rate (Score:4, Informative)
Re:low refresh rate (Score:4, Informative)
Re:low refresh rate (Score:2)
Re:NOT! (Score:2)
They aren't fine in hardcore gaming in tourneys for money. In the WorldChampionshipGames (WCG) US qualifier games, the sponsors put in LCD's, and as a result, people's accuracies went sour in Quake3.
LCD's and Wireless kbd/mice don't mix well with hardcore gaming (yet).
> BTW I go to Boviyan University in Chalmers, VA.
And as an aside, the question that we answered is, are YOU the sniper? Playing FPS games and living in VA and all.
I don't buy it (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:I don't buy it (Score:3, Interesting)
The 15.1" LCD on my laptop is HELLISHLY good looking.
Gimme a break.You can talk about latency and whatnot, but I guarantee a gamer won't notice a degradation in his gameplay due to a good LCD screen nowadays. I would rather look at my LCD anyday; especially when rendering systems take into account the sub-pixel control they can use.
As for colors.. yes, that's an issue, and one that will affect graphic artists for sure... but only those who need to move color into the real world (film, print). Those doing computer only will have to put up with display mechanisms that use lcds anyway.. so it's moot.
Re:I don't buy it (Score:5, Interesting)
Cheers,
-- RLJ
Dear Moron. (Score:2)
Kindly collect your inbreed clan and fuck off, lest you should render /. an even less tollerable place to hold a discussion than it currently is.
-- RLJ
Re:I don't buy it (Score:2)
Well, hardcore gamers will, and they have [challenge-us.com]. Casual gaming and gaming in tourneys are quite different things. Hardcore gaming with LCD's just puts you in an disadvantage.
Re:I don't buy it (Score:2)
Re:I don't buy it (Score:2)
A CRT monitor has a much higher ultimate resolution (not usable resolution that you can set your video to) that can show e.g. 800x600 and 1024x786 with better accuracy and no artifical scaleing.
well, if you go by sales alone... (Score:5, Insightful)
Seems a little slow to me. (Score:2, Interesting)
Not a moment too soon (Score:5, Funny)
It's a worry.
btw (Score:2)
Re:btw (Score:2)
The Actual Report.. (Score:4, Informative)
-
Maciek
Re:The Actual Report.. (Score:3, Interesting)
I think the next two years will see LCDs replace CRTs for all but the very low end and large (20"+ virewable) displays. I'm personally tired of dealing with the large bulky monsters. Environmentally they are probably be easier to dispose of than CRTs. The power, space savings, and ergonomics are another big plus for buisness.
subsolar
Re:The Actual Report.. (Score:2)
-Mars
Re:The Actual Report.. (Score:4, Interesting)
Then I bought one. The image just looks better after several hours of staring at it, there is virtually no eyestrain, and the geometry is always perfect, sharp and straight (so very good for CAD work).
I have yet to find a person (although I have the feeling I'm about to...) who has used a desktop LCD as a primary display for at least a month, and wants to switch back to a CRT for reasons other than size.
Price showdown (Score:4, Interesting)
I am not surprised at all (Score:5, Informative)
The rise of the flat panel is very good for colleges, not just in terms of power-saving costs but also in terms of space. The CRTs just take up a lot of space on the small college desks. My CRT/keyboard prevents me from even having room for a notebook and pen to do math problem sets on - I need to go to the library to do any non-computer work. Whenever I go support someone with an LCD I eye it with envy, and the day approaches when I will be forced to get one for myself :-)
Re:I am not surprised at all (Score:2)
If the average dorm were just a little bit bigger than the average walk-in closet...
Re:I am not surprised at all (Score:2)
Yup, they did the _exact_ same thing (new imacs+dells/lcds) in my college (gatech).
what about laptops? (Score:5, Funny)
I don't have one, don't want one. (Score:3, Insightful)
Gaming (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Gaming (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Gaming (Score:3, Insightful)
Also, lumping all gamers together isn't quite right. First person shooters are the only genre that really suffers from moving to a slightly inferior monitor. A gamer that logs massive hours in something like Civilization, The Sims or Everquest may actually prefer the break on the eyes. Its funny to see so many people claim gamers will spend any amount on a CRT but never mention that the perfectd solution may in fact be one of each.
I really don't mean this as flamebait to the many technophiles here.
Re:Gaming (Score:2)
It's been well proven in competitive (fps) gaming. For example, at the recent WCG qualifiers, accuracy in quake3 was quite a bit less in the qualifier in California (where the sponsor put LCD's), than the qualifiers in Texas or Georgia (where CRT's were used). Download demos at cached.net [cached.net], if you have a recent version of q3 and osp.
Very few good FPS gamers use either LCD's or things like wireless mice.
five to one??? (Score:5, Insightful)
That's a pretty optimistic prediction, because the current price ratio is about 5 CRT monitors for the cost of 1 flat-panel. Common sense tell us that the price of a flat-panel screen would have to drop by about 60%-70% before the majority of consumers would consider buying forking out the extra cash to save 1 or 2 cubic feet of desk space.
Flat PANEL not Flat SCREEN (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Flat PANEL not Flat SCREEN (Score:2, Interesting)
The best part is... (Score:2, Insightful)
Seriously, if I could get a 19" LCD for $200-300 more than a 19" CRT with the same resolution, I'd do it. I know that price point is a long way off, but if you've got lots of companies making the parts, and serious competition, it could happen (closer to their 2006 time frame). Anyway, LCD's are so much easier on the eyes.
Just a thought...
Re:The best part is... (Score:2)
Seriously, if I could get a 19" LCD for $200-300 more than a 19" CRT with the same resolution, I'd do it.
Bear in mind that a 19" LCD will have a larger viewable area than a 19" CRT. Try comparing a 17" LCD to a 19" CRT, you'll probably find that they look much the same size.
I went from a 17" CRT to a 15" LCD (Hercules Prophetview), and it looks to be much the same size, and a hell of a lot easier on the eyes. It only does 1024x768 natively, but that's good enough for me, and running games at lower res actually looks excellent - the panel bilinearly filters it up to 1024x768 (no crappy pixel doubling), and I think 640x480 for instance looks better than it did on a CRT that could display it "properly".
Depends.... (Score:3, Interesting)
The laptop monitors and flat panels that I have use are not highly advanced like CRTs are, but this will come in time. They don't like resolutions other than their native resolution, they don't have nice full colors all the time, and they some panels still have ghosting! This is all ok for web browsing, but for image editing, web design, programming, anything to do with graphical design, and gaming flat panels are not adeqaute for my need. Maybe I am just bitter because my laptop doesn't go over 800x600 unless I want to scroll the actual screen.
Flat panels surely have their advantages. The technology just needs to mature a little.
I'm sorry to say it but... (Score:2, Funny)
The article is right because... (Score:5, Insightful)
Pulling a muscle?? (Score:2)
someone better get their terms right (Score:5, Informative)
I already own a nice CRT... (Score:2, Interesting)
Are these figures skewed for reasons like this?
They already have 100% share of the Media market (Score:3, Interesting)
Their product placement investment must be through the roof!
Re:They already have 100% share of the Media marke (Score:2)
That's because everyone in media-land is rich and attractive, and we all want to be just like them.
Re:They already have 100% share of the Media marke (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not sure, but this may have something to do with how they look when you film them. If you're shooting with a fast shutter speed, you can get some ugly effects from the scanning of the monitor. That's why you'll see some odd flickering of the screen on CRTs in movies. IIRC, there's not the same problem with LCDs so they should be easier to film.
Re:They already have 100% share of the Media marke (Score:2, Informative)
1.
Shoot film at 24 fps. Now set your monitor to a multiple of 24. 48Mhz is not really an option, so its 24 * 3 = 72Mhz, if you are lucky enough to find a screen / video card combo with this resolution. When you do, you cherish and preserve it like your first born child.
This problem, and the ones below, also apply to video at 30fps, or 25fps. Don't even get me started on interlaced fields though.
2.
Now sync your cameras shutter speed to the computer monitor, taking phase into account. Ever notice that phase varies slightly with the environment over time. The more EM in the area, the more it varies. We have an office next to a high power streetcar line, and we had to switch to LCD near the lines because the monitors strobe so bad in response to fluctuations in the lines that staff were getting sick from looking at the monitors.
Needless to say, a film location shoot is one major source of RF. Stick a few light kits in the region, a few wireless lav mikes and some other toys, and you have a prime situation for phasing. Which means forget about perfect sync.
Solution, you get a device that slaves the shutter on the camera to the shutter on the monitor. NOT a cheap option.
4
Now you arrive on set, having obtained and tested all your equipment, to discover they are running a 'Hollywood Interface' designed in flash running at 15fps (if you are lucky).
You are now doomed. You often end up having to completely remove the interface of the monitor in POST and digitally replace it with a rendered version of the same interface in POST.
Expensive, very expensive.
In most productions, we got to the point of giving up and setting a pure green image in the display. We key it out later and add the interface in post production. It's cheaper when it's planned that way.
The scene in Swordfish where Hugh Jackman dances his little hacker dance - screens were empty (IIRC, I wasn't involved). The scene in men in black where tommy lee jones pines for his lost love, the screen was blank. etc., etc.,
LCD's have made filming infinitely easier. ESPECIALLY for low budget production. It's far from perfect, but I will settle until video card write back performance reaches reasonable enough speeds to allow full frame rate capture of the ikntgerface at high resolutions (1024x768 or above).
Even then I will take a LCD over a CRT for 90% of filming tasks any day. Which is one of the prime reason why you see them everywhere in media. Another is certainly coolness, but I assure you, no comapny has to give me a CRT to make me use it in production. It's more like I beg for them....
BONUS POINTS
Exercise 1.
Try lugging a complement of CRT monitors around on location shoots. Compare with
LCD.
Exercise 2.
Power a CRT off a battery pack for a remote location shoot. Time the battery life. Repeat experiment with LCD.
What about the quality? (Score:5, Interesting)
They better substantially increase the quality of the displays before I buy one, and I hope keeping my CRT at work until the quality improves.
But, I agree that business might buy them for saving power, space and avoid the "bad" radiations emitted by CRTs.
Re:What about the quality? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What about the quality? (Score:2)
unlucky, but every LCD that we've gotten looks
good at ONE resolution (around 1280x1024 or
something like that). Want to go higher or lower?
Guess that's too bad for you."
Yes, that's how LCDs work. It has a
"native resolution", say 1280x1024, and it
actually has exactly that many pixels on it.
Running it higher will "lose" some of the pixels,
and running it lower will either duplicate some
of them or just give you a black border.
With a CRT, you just adjust the timings, and let
the pixels slop onto whatever phosphors happen to
be there. If you want multiple resolutions or
superior color adjustment, you're stuck with CRT.
Just go for a nice high refresh rate, and you
should be fine...
21in CRTs (Score:2)
Not for me until the price is EQUAL CRTs (Score:2)
- I don't care about the power consumption
- I SO don't care about saving desk space... my desk is built to handle a bigger monitor anyway
- CRTs look just as good as LCD monitors, IMO, if not better
Why spend any more? I have a 21" monitor, and there is no way in hell I could afford a 21" LCD. Even a 19" LCD probably costs more than what I can get a 21" for.
For people that want flat screen monitors, I say go for it, but it is nothing but a waste of money...
Mark
Sorry, nay-sayers (Score:3, Informative)
I will NEVER buy another CRT.
Check your references (Score:4, Insightful)
compactness (Score:4, Funny)
This got me thinking. Cellphones are worse quality than landed lines, and more expensive, but they are compact, and they sell (and people use them at home). Laptops are slower and more expensive than desktops, and they're hard to type on, and the mouse sucks, but they're compact, and they sell (even in the home). Music CD's have a horrendous markup, but they're compact, and they sell. MP3 players sound worse than CD's, and flash memory is expensive, and you have to upload all the songs (which is the same work as burning a cd), but they're compact, and they sell.
It seems like compactness is the ultimate feature. But then why do so many people drive SUV's?
Re:compactness (Score:5, Insightful)
Ah, grasshopper, you come so close to the truth, yet so far away. It is not compactness that is the ultimate feature, it is price. He who has the most expensive toys becomes the envy of his friends, thus enhancing his self-esteem. Cell phones, laptops, and SUVs are status symbols - every American wants them because the sages of Madison Avenue tell them that these objects will bring happiness.
Re:compactness (Score:2)
Right, just like all the hardcore gamers here who have overpriced video cards that no software or game even takes advantage of? These same folks whining about the yuppies blowing their money on LCDs for no good reason? Haha!
Personally, I have two boxes at home, both with LCD monitors. They are easier on the eyes, better allowing me to get work done. Sure, they were expensive, but at least I've got a good reason to use them. Not everyone buys pricy items to "be cool".
Re:compactness (Score:2, Funny)
That is so they can compact other cars on the road. It's out of courtesy--after all, smaller is better.
Re:compactness (Score:4, Funny)
Refresh Rates for Gamin (Score:4, Informative)
Fast refreshing LCD monitors won't be cheap for a while.
Flat panel monitors only or Laptops too? (Score:3, Insightful)
LCDs (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:LCDs (Score:2)
Not in my house.... (Score:2)
A little history repeating itself (Score:3, Insightful)
"Someday, it'll be afforadable" I thought to myself. That someday came in the late 90s. So I got one. Of course, I liked it.
Flat panels are the same way. Do I want one? Yes. Will I eventually buy one? Yes. Will I spend 700-1500 for a good quality one right now? Not on your life.
If these industry experts really belive that it will pass up CRTs this year, then they really have to change the pricing structure on them.
In the meantime, I'm very happy with my current 19" NEC, in black, which looks dang cool and cost me $250.
I dunno... (Score:5, Insightful)
1) Find a 2 year old.
2) Give them a random hard, pointy object such as a ball-point pen. (This step is optional, toddlers can create such objects out of thin air. You just have more control this way.)
3) Put said toddler within 6 feet of flat panel monitor with a pretty screen saver being displayed.
The problem with an LCD is that you don't hear the "ting ting ting" warning bell that a CRT gives you when a toddler is too close.
Re:I dunno... (Score:5, Insightful)
Idea: Keep said 2-year-old away from said expensive monitor. Keep said 2-year-old away from other expensive, delicate, and/or dangerous objects as well.
(Is parenting a lost art? "No" a word from a dead language?)
Spoken like a true nonparent. Life is not easily segmented into "safe, cushy, cheap, expendable romper room" and "everything else."
Re:I dunno... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I dunno... (Score:2)
Why do they bother? Image. :) (Score:2, Interesting)
I had to laugh - all of these people, spending hundreds of extra dollars on LCD monitors in order to save desk space, keep putting the monitors on top of their desktop computer cases.
Flat-Panel != Flat-Screen (Score:2)
Minor term-useage quibble...
Stop harping on the desktop space issue! (Score:3, Interesting)
1. They're much lighter and easier to move. You don't need a heavy-duty desk that's able to withstand a 50lb monitor.
2. They're much, much easier to see in normal sunlight and well-lit rooms. No glare. Geez, just walk into Best Buy and look at how awful CRTs look in the store lighting.
3. A perfectly sharp, rock-solid image that is much easier on the eyes. It isn't worth sticking your head in the sand about this. It's your eyes we're talking about.
If you factor in the lower power consumption, we have a winner.
Re:Stop harping on the desktop space issue! (Score:2, Informative)
Indoors, LCD displays are incredible. However, the second you get real, natural sunlight--as opposed to your typical lightbulb--LCD displays are worthless.
The number one problem with PDAs, laptops and mobile phones are the problems surrounding outdoor viewing. The most expensive displays are the ones that are able to be viewable outdoors.
They are also the first ones to burn out.
flat? (Score:2, Interesting)
I Love my Laptop's Display (Score:3, Interesting)
I would love to find the same screen, or similar in an LCD. 15" is fine for me as long as I can do 1600x1200. I havn't done much research, except browsing in stores, but none of the 15" LCD's seem to do 1600x1200. What gives?
Suggested things to look at anyone? I bought my last CRT about 3 years ago (a great Sony Trinitron 21"), I know my next monitor purchase will be an LCD.
I have been putting it off due to the price, although that aspect has come along quite a ways. I am sure there are others like me putting off CRT purchases and planning to go with LCD's instead once prices seem reasonable. 1600x1200 LCD's arn't cheap. LCD sales will only pick up once my "market segment" decides to shell out the cash.
-Pete
KDS RAD-5 and Loving It (Score:2, Interesting)
If I wasn't moving, I'd have probably just got another CRT to replace it... But since I still had a few more weeks to go at the old house and whatever monitor I bought had to move with me, I started looking at LCDs. After reading a few comparisons and reviews, then finally going to the local Best Buy, CompUSA and Office Depot stores, I decided on the KDS RAD-5.
Since the majority of my computer usage is just browsing the web, wordprocessing, photo cropping, using VB and some very infrequent gaming, the slower refresh of an LCD hasn't been a problem. While DivX and DVD movies seem to look fine on the monitor, I prefer using my video card's (a Radeon 8500) TV-out for video - 15" is just too small for good movie enjoyment.
Besides the sharpness and the perfect screen geometry, the other thing I like about LCDs is that they give off very little heat. My old 17" CRT was having a space heater on and would quickly heat up the entire room. I have a feeling though that when I upgrade from a PIII 850MHz to an Athlon XP2000 that the computer will pick up where the monitor leaves off in the heat department.
My "switch" story ... (Score:5, Interesting)
As luck would have it, I also own a wonderful Dell Inspiron 8000 laptop with the 15" 1600x1200 display. For the longest time I was running Windows 2000 on it, but when I heard about ClearType (sub-pixel font rendering) on Steve Gibson's site (GRC.com) I thought I'd give it a try. I was pretty impressed and decided to try the full-blown item with Windows XP Professional a try.
It was, in a word, mind-blowing!
Never before had text looked so sharp and clear - and after using it for several multi-hour coding sessions (aside from only the single display) it didn't give me headaches like my two CRTs did (even though I'd tried virtually every refresh rate setting from 60 to 120Hz).
That made the difference for me, so I slowly replaced my two 19" CRTs with two 17" Iiyama black LCDs (retail around $640 US for the digital versions, $610 for analog). Remember that CRTs cheat and don't really measure the actual diagonal, so that the 19" CRT is much more like 17.something (mine were 17.8"), whereas the LCDs are ACTUAL diagonal. So those who are saying, "Not until they have affordable 19" displays!" are missing the boat - for all intents and purposes a 17" LCD *is* equal to a 19" CRT in terms of usable display size. The LCD goes from bezel edge to bezel edge with ZERO loss in quality in the corners, something my CRTs could not claim. So in practice, I would guestimate the actual screen real estate are about equal.
As I didn't have the cash right away to drop on two, I ran for quite a while on one LCD (digital through my GeForce4 Ti4400) and one CRT. The differences were astounding - the CRT was noticeably not as bright as the LCD, and text was HORRIBLE to read. It was like trying to focus on a blurry photograph - your eyes keep trying to find the right focus and could never really adjust. It game me a TERRIBLE headache after only a few minutes, so I sold the CRT and waited for my next paycheck and got the second one. While both displays are digital (along with secondary analog inputs) my Ti4400 only has a single DVI output, so my secondary monitor is in *analog* mode until I can fix that (maybe a PCI card with digital?). I won't lie and say they look identical, but it is not nearly as dramatic as the CRT comparison.
Resolution-wise 1280x1024 is not a big deal to me. I enjoy my laptop's 1600x1200 and would hope we start seeing 17" affordable desktop LCDs in that range soon, but it isn't killing me. XP's ClearType provides for amazingly sharp text as it is, so the slightly larger fonts look pretty anyway.
Gaming, or LCD's *supposed* Achilles' heel. I play a couple games - Half-Life Counter-Strike, UT, Medal of Honor: Allied Assault, Stronghold Crusader - and have noticed ZERO blurring problems. None. Nada. Zip. Zilch. Zero. Get it? It's a NON-ISSUE. Perhaps my system (Athlon 1.333Ghz, 512MB PC2100, ATA100 HDD, 128MB GeForce4 Ti4400, etc.) is not fast enough to get the frame rate above the pixel response rate, but it is not a problem with my Iiyama digital LCD displays. Certainly it can be an issue with older or slower displays, but anything in the sub 30ms rate should be fine. The calculation (from Tom's Hardware) to turn response into FPS is: 1 / (rate * 0.001). So 30 ms = 1 / 0.030 = 33.3 images displayed on the screen per second. 25ms = 40fps. Your eye notices things at 25fps or higher to be continuous 'full-motion' and at 30 it seems to be the 'magic number'. Remember to read the fine print on each monitor since some companies will list 'average' display rate or some other random numbers. Find the worst-case percentage and see if you can live with it. The only problem I've noticed is that when the games exit and the video mode switches the LCD panel never 'wakes up'. I am sure everyone knows what I am talking about - the screen flickers, the green indicator turns amber for a while, and then it dumps you back to your desktop. Well, the LCD (or my Beta 4 Detonator drivers) must give up early on the video card and goes to a 'You have nothing hooked up' screen. I have to turn it on and off to re-cycle the display.
I have noticed that certain extremely light web-page backgrounds (the old background pattern on http://www.angsttechnology.com for example) the colors appear to be washed out (you could only see a little bit of the pattern) but it is generally not an issue for anything you are *actively* looking at (games, photos, etc.). Contrast seems to be better than my CRT as well, and the images appear to be more saturated on the LCD, somewhat startlingly so. When playing something like Command and Conquer: Red Alert 2 (or any other real-time strategy game) the colors are MANY TIMES more vivid - it is hard to explain but a really cool feeling the first time you fire up a game. First-person shooters look different as well; generally I have to turn the gamma up a notch or two since they all appear BLACK in the dark areas. I am not sure if that is how it *should* be and my CRT was inadequate or it is an LCD artifact, but I generally noticed LCD improvement over the CRT images.
I also notice that certain images online are not as smooth looking on the LCD. Again on InkTank (http://www.angsttechnology.com/AT/index.cfm, a really good geeky comic; if you have time check out the archives!) you can see 'jaggies' or anti-aliasing artifacts far more clearly on the LCD. It appears to happen on thin black antialiased lines more than any other. The black outline on PennyArcade looks (I think) how it should be, but the lines on Ink Tank were the #1 first thing I noticed after I got the displays. Now, of course, my eyes have gotten adjusted and so I no longer see them any more.
Anyways, to make an entirely too long post short, I have no misgivings about the LCD purchase. You often get what you pay for, and a cheap panel will probably yield a poor display picture. Mine is pretty much perfect. Give it a try, you might like it!
www.LCD.com/switch
Unlikely...... (Score:4, Informative)
Believe me the only advantage is space.
My company maintains the hardware (over 30000 devices) for one of the worlds top 3 hospitals.
I can tell you there is no way in he11 that any flatscreen will outlive many of the 7+ year old 15/17 inch CTX's (yes, crappy CTX's) I see on the floor everyday. (These monitors have been turned on LITERALLY THEIR ENTIRE LIFE) The place is starting to rollout fold-down stations with flatpanels/winterms and the flatpanels (under 24 hour hospital use) are crapping out far quicker than the CRT's. (usually inverter boards, they power the lamp that lights the lcd)
Before you say "buy better brand and/or "industrial model" LCD's" please understand these are for the most part Viewsonic high end flatpanels. All brands are showing a higher failure rate than CRT's though.
All I see for now is a space advantage. I know they comsume less power but many companies could care less.
Remember, cheap and effective usually wins out over everything else.
Gaming with a LCD screen (Score:5, Informative)
I just bought a Samsung 172T [samsungelectronics.com] (read an early glowing review [modfactor.com]). It's the first LCD screen I've owned, although I've used plenty before; I have a laptop for work.
Just like plenty of comments from this thread [slashdot.org] from yesterday, plenty of non-LCD-owning people here seem to have a strong opinion on the matter :)
I couldn't be happier with my new screen. At the stated response rate of 25ms, I have an effective screen refresh rate of 40 updates a second, ie. faster than my eye can detect. The monitor can handle being fed 72Hz at 1280x1024 (native res), which is better than my old Acer 77c 17" could manage. I've always played games with v-sync switched on to prevent tearing in the past (for the uninitiated, v-sync means the card sends the same number of frames per second as the screen refresh rate, so that monitor doesn't try to display parts of two frames at once and cause visible tearing). The long and the short of all this is that the screen is happily updating as fast as my eyes and brain need it to. As a bonus:
Sure - many gamers won't get an LCD because on paper they doesn't match current CRT capabilities. But good ones come close enough.
Re:Gaming with a LCD screen (Score:3, Interesting)
And 40Hz, isn't very good. At your resolution my 17" CRT (Samsung 700IFT) will handle 89Hz. When is play FPS games is usually drop down to 1024x768 at which, my display can handle 116Hz. Your TFT has
I find what matters so much is not, LCD vs CRT, but flat screen vs non-flat. Once you start watching things on flat displays you just don't want to go back. Now have a flatscreen tv too.
I just don't feel like the value is there yet for LCDs. If I can get a faster, sharper display for less, I can handle lifting it twice a year.
You may wany to check out this comparison of TFTs vs CRTs. [tomshardware.com]
You'll note that CRTs have better:
Dead pixels (Score:2)
Right now I have a 17" Samsung 700IFT (nice flat screen CRT). My next display is going to be at least 19". LCDs at those sizes seem to always have dead pixels. A lab partner of mine dropped around a grand on a nice big LCD and it had a red pixel stuck on in the center of the screen. He returned it and manged to get another with a green pixel stuck off more towards the edge of the screen. They claimed that they 'usually' don't even let you return one unless it has multiple dead pixels.
I'm not going to start considering an LCD until I can get one that is at least 19" with all the pixels work correctly, and at less than twice the price of a CRT.
I really like the space and energy saving aspects of an LCD, but there is still a lot of work that needs to be done before CRTs go the way of the dodo.
Another study disagrees. (Score:3, Informative)
I might get a LCD... (Score:3, Insightful)
1. The resolutions. CRT's have better resolutions and you can freely change resolutions. LCD's are limited when it comes to max-resolutions (the ones that can do 1600x1200 cost too much) and the image-quality deteriorates if you use a "non-native" resolution
2. Response time. It's just too high on LCD's. Luckily this is getting better all the time.
3. The price. They cost quite a bit more than CRT's.
When those three points are fixed, I might consider it.
Re:Movies and Games (Score:2)
I have an NEC MultiSync LCD 1700v in front of me. I have noticed no problems with either movies or games. Also the viewable area is almost as good as the 19" ViewSonic Monster that sits beside it.
Re:Movies and Games (Score:2)
Re:Movies and Games (Score:2)
Re:I dont' think so (Score:2)
Re:I dont' think so (Score:2)
For pure text, LCDS are great, if very expensive. But for graphics, video, or gaming, even the best of them don't work well. The very thing that makes LCDs great for text editing (Extremely high contrast) also make imaging on them nearly impossible. Everything 70% gray is white. It's impossible to see the details of the low and high ends while the details of the middle spectrum are largely exagerrated. LCDs also are not very linear with their reproduction of color from bit to bit. Also making profesional imaging nearly impossible. They get better abd better every year, but are still atleast 5 years from matching CRTs on image quality.
Re:I dont' think so (Score:2)
However, they do have lots of advantages too:
Smaller size, quiet (i can hear the sound of many CRT monitors and TVs), less power, easy to move and rotate, no startup time, no need to degauss, no flicker, environmentally safe, less hazardous when breaks, less heat, no geometry problems and so on.
Re:More analysts predictions? (Score:2)
Among non-geeks (most of my friends) flat-panels are more highly admired, for their sleekness and "hi-tech" look.
Its not worth the $$. (You could buy a lot more ram for the difference)
Sure, but I have half a gig of RAM now, and I've never noticed my system starving for more. I do notice slight headaches and eyestrain after looking at my 17" CRT at home for more than an hour or so. I'm considering a flat-panel for that reason. If it saves me from needing eyeglasses or contacts, it'll nearly pay for itself.
Just pointing out that anecdotal evidence goes both ways. The analysts are probably just going off sales forecasts from manufacturers, though, so who knows how close they'll be?
Re:Not until they become cheaper (Score:2)
If I weren't a gamer I'd probably be waiting for my current monitor to burn out so I could replace it with a 17" LCD, which I expect will be under $400 by the time that happens. No sense throwing out perfectly good hardware just because it's big!
Re:Evidence (Score:2)
I also have a 171P, and I too want to chime in with the, "Damn it's cool, and by association, so am I." (If you think I'm trying to brag, rest assured that since my bank account is now empty, the bragging is all I have left. :)
But there is some actual data I'll bring to the discussion: as you shop for an LCD monitor, the specs vary widely. The contrast ratio on the 171P I think is 500:1; I've seen monitors with a ratio as low as 200:1. When actually looking at the monitors, the difference is dramatic. Other stats, including brightness, viewing angle, and response also vary widely model-to-model, too.
I guess the moral is: the variance in specs on LCD monitors is surprising, so you need to absolutely check them out, or you can be disappointed. Additionally, the fact that things like "viewing angle" are important is probably new to the "CRT spec evaluation engine" you have in your head; be sure to make adjustments as needed.
I'd like to address a point some other people have been making about how LCDs are too expensive. Remember, the LCD is effectively bigger than a tube because of the way they measure the size. I have the 17 inch LCD next to my 19 inch CRT, and dammed if the actual viewing area isn't exacly the same. (The specs actually say the 19 inch screen is viewable something like 18.1, but I have my doubts. I need to go home and measure, I guess.) In any case, you should probably do the same: measure your current monitor, and measure any LCD you're considering buying. You might be surprised.