LG Flatron 2320A 23" LCD Media Station Reviewed 132
Julio writes "TechSpot has taken an in-depth look at LG's Flatron 2320A 23" LCD, you should know however that calling this a monitor would be an understatement, this is a multi-media workstation. The package consists of a 23" widescreen LCD color monitor, and a multi-media station that lets you connect its beautiful flat screen to your PC and a number of devices at the same time (X-Box, etc.). Feel yourself warned though, luxury does come at a cost."
Sigh (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Sigh (Score:1, Informative)
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Re:Sigh (Score:1, Interesting)
LMAO (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Julio Franco (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Julio Franco (Score:1)
Re:Julio Franco (Score:1)
Go Julio! (Score:1, Funny)
Administrative Contact:
Franco, Julio (ZBIODSWBEI) julio_francoh@hotmail.com
Julio Franco is amazing! Still playing baseball [go.com] at age 46, and yet he finds the time to get into home entertainment too??
Re:Sigh - WHOIS? (Score:1)
$2,500 and no network jack? (Score:1)
Re:Sigh (Score:2)
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Feel yourself warned though, luxury does come at a cost.
Well it seems like somebody probably got one for free.
Don't call it a monitor? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Don't call it a monitor? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Don't call it a monitor? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Don't call it a monitor? (Score:5, Informative)
Btw, most LCDs do run at "60Hz", but not every pixel needs to be toggled every cycle, so it's not exactly the best way to measure them. Other than ms, I'm not sure what they use now. Maybe we should have some sort of "number of pixel changes per second per pixel" or something.
Re:Don't call it a monitor? (Score:1, Informative)
There's two different (albeit related) functions here. The refresh rate of a CRT is how many times a second the entire fieldcan be refreshed. usually goes from 60 to 120 or more
Re:Don't call it a monitor? (Score:2)
I just bought a new gaming/development machine, and part of that was a pair of LG L1715S [ebuyer.com] flat panels.
They're absolutely gorgeous, doing 1280x1024 at 75hz, with a 16ms response time. It's wonderful for playing games on as well, since it gives a really crisp, flat picture, instead of the slightly dull curved one from my old CRT.
Re:Don't call it a monitor? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Don't call it a monitor? (Score:1)
and here's the competition... (Score:2, Interesting)
Why has it taken so long to get decent pixel depth on LCD monitors when it's been available in laptops for some time now?
Re:and here's the competition... (Score:4, Interesting)
The only desktop displays above 100dpi are IBM's and Viewsonic's 200dpi displays (I kid you not, 23" 4:3 displays with 4k x 3k pixels) running for over $6000 now.
Unfortunately, the current limitation with a lot of software is that they don't scale with DPI so well, you increase the font size to compensate for the resolution increase, and the text doesn't fit boxes so well. I'd like to see a display that is as crisp as a laser printout, I figure 300dpi is a pretty good target.
Re:and here's the competition... (Score:3, Insightful)
For example. I have an IBM Thinkpad with a 14" 1400x1050 screen (set at 104dpi). Most of my fonts are 10pt, and some are 8pt. Now most people would say 8pt is tiny. But that's only because almost noone correctly s
a $50 LCD would be more impressive (Score:5, Insightful)
having moved to brazil, the perspective for everything changed.
i see from here a vast need for lower costing, not higher featured, everything.
YMMV, my 2 cents, etc
a $5 LCD would be extra impressive (Score:5, Funny)
Unlike Brazil where you could use a normal monitor that already costs less than $50 the lack of desk space in Africa makes a sub $10 LCD a necessity
Re:a $50 LCD would be more impressive (Score:2)
Extra features are often cheap to add, so it allows these companies to keep the prices high. They don't want to get into the low cost business any sooner than they have to, the margins are much smaller and they want to maximize the return on investment too. This will gradually change as more players enter the market,
Re:a $50 LCD would be more impressive (Score:3, Informative)
The reality is, if you strip most products down to their bare-bones functionality they'll cost about the same price.
Extra features allow the consumer to think that the price is the result of the combined total, when we all know quite well that the speakers and other features are probably crap.
They also provide a point of competitive difference, this screen is quite poor quality for 23" inches, a 23" App
There are realistic limits (Score:2)
If you've an idea as to how to make LCDs for a retail price of $50/each, then lets hear it.
Shopper.com prices (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Shopper.com prices (Score:5, Insightful)
Finally (Score:1, Funny)
For 800$... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:For 800$... (Score:2)
Oh, and no I am not going to get a domain and link this review to it.
Re:For 800$... (Score:2)
For $1,299... (Score:4, Informative)
or a 17' screen with a complete G5 included...
http://store.apple.com/
Seems like a better deal to me
Re:For $1,299... (Score:1, Informative)
The Apple equivalent is their 23" monitor which is $2000 but has a different feature set (e.g. no big-ass speakers and remote). The resolution of both monitors is 1920 x 1200, but BEWARE... the LG only gets that resolution if you use the analog input (according to the specs in the review). Its resolution with digital is 1600 x 1200.
Re:For $1,299... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:For $1,299... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:For $1,299... (Score:2)
Re:For $1,299... (Score:2)
Symbol alert. Inches is made with the "Double Quotes" symbols.
Re:For $1,299... (Score:2)
The new Dell W2600 seems to be narrowing this gap, but it is stupidly low resolution (1280x768) for a
Re:For 800$... (Score:3, Interesting)
It has a shitty remote, though.
Linky. [viewsonic.com]
You grow to love the Widescreen aspect ratio (Score:1)
You'd be surprised at how nice widescreen is, though. At work, on my 1600X1200 LCD, I can run two browsers side by side by shrinking the width of one window slightly; but I'm out of luck if I want to run an IM window, a monitoring window, an xterm, or show portions of my desktop (for gdesklets) at the same time. With the 1900X1200, you can run two 800X1200 windows side by
Re:For 800$... (Score:2)
I'd rather have _all_ my monitors be cheap LCDs than mess with CRTs. Still 1 CRT left though.
Re:For 800$... (Score:2)
Now this LG makes me horny but for $2500? forget it. it's about a thousand dollars too expensive for what it offers. (No DVI for resolutions over 1600x1200? unacceptable!) And yes, i know it's a limitation of DVI and not the monitor itself, still. unacceptable.
ok lets get this outta the way... (Score:3, Funny)
2.) mmmm life sized porn
3.) Generally the problem is that the TV signal is not worth watching.
4.2)Slashdot : Commercials for nerds, it's money that matters.
8. Yes, I should probably learn to count.
2.) Gamers, what about reviewers of *ahem* adult entertainment material?
Laugh, your boss is behind you...
Low resolution (Score:3, Interesting)
Would this be high enough? (Score:2)
The reason for 1920 x 1200 (or even multiples thereof) is it will do full HDTV with no resizing or interpolation (best viewing) assuming you set it for proper letterboxing to 1920 x 1080 in HDTV mode.
I assume in the not too distant future WQUXGA will be sub $1000 and common. Fonts are hard to read already at WUXGA. Above this (for now) this stuff is more for digital photography and medical imaging.
But I still want one.
Re:Would this be high enough? (Score:2)
The GUI should understand that the display has a high number of dots per inch, and thus use more dots to display an object of the same size.
This is not limited to fonts, but should also include other GUI elements.
Unfortunately, many sizes have historically been specified in "pixels". This means trouble when you get a high resolution screen, use "large fonts", and then view HTML pages...
OT: *GA acronyms (Score:2)
OK, I learned what CGA, EGA, VGA, and SVGA meant. I started to to get a little fuzzy starting with SVGA and XGA. And anything beyond SXGA is pure fog to me.
And now we're up to WQUXGA? Ack. Who or what industry consortium is thinking these up?
I'm glad people like DumbSwede are also mentioning the actual resolution as well. But isn't that a sign that the acronyms have now become nearly useless?
Becuase, at the end of the day, all I care about is the actual resolution (in pixels
Re:OT: *GA acronyms (Score:1)
What, no serial? (Score:2, Funny)
Did I mention this monitor looks amazing? (Score:3, Funny)
It's really an Apple Cinema Display (Score:3, Interesting)
It even connects with ADC (Score:5, Insightful)
Pretty cool that LG is reusing the stuff they developed for Apple, though.
Re:It's really an Apple Cinema Display (Score:2)
Ugh... (Score:5, Insightful)
I certainly believe that at this price point, LG is going to make an excellent display. They are a reputable company.
However, the reviewer has no clue what he's talking about.
He's obviously never used an LCD panel before, as all he compares the monitor to is 'his old crt'. He notes that colors seem a bit faded compared to a CRT, which IMO, is simply the result of using the wrong ICC profile, though I will agree that the gamma / color range of an LCD panel is often not as good as that of a CRT (especially a high-end CRT, though those will cost you about as much as this beast would)
That being said, it's cool, I like it, and if I were looking for the world's most expensive 23" TV and could actually afford it, I'd buy it. From the review, it looked like you could hook 3 PCs + a number of AV components to it. It's a nice substitute for a KVM for people like me who use a mac, but keep a PC hooked up for the few programs I run that aren't Mac-native.
Still.... it's expensive... a point he doesn't really cover in the review. But, yes, I also believe that this product is probably the best in its class just by looking at the feature list.
Re:Ugh... (Score:2)
A better deal (Score:5, Informative)
23" Cinema Display - more style, less money (Score:5, Informative)
Exact same lcd panel in a much cooler case for a few hundred less.
"Media Station" ? (Score:2)
Oh shit, mine didn't come with a big hulking box with its own fan. Or a remote to turn it off. Did you see that the VCR buttons only work with LG VCRs? Watch me sob in the corner, for I have buyer's remorse.
no function button! (Score:2, Funny)
(page 2 of the article, on the diagram of the remote)
DRTFA (Score:1)
flatiron? (Score:2)
apple cinematic 23" + sony 23" (Score:4, Interesting)
apple cinematic 23" [apple.com] $1,999
Sony 23" LCD [digitalconnection.com] $2,429
BTW: the resolution (1920x1200) is enough for HDTV.
I'm using the Apple 23" to type this. The real estate is great, but I miss the viewing angle of a CRT - viewing angle begins to matter when the display is that wide.
How in the Wide, Wide World of Sports..... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:How in the Wide, Wide World of Sports..... (Score:1)
Re:How in the Wide, Wide World of Sports..... (Score:1)
Re:How in the Wide, Wide World of Sports..... (Score:2)
Useless garbage, 25ms response (Score:2, Redundant)
1600x1200 max on DVI? (Score:2)
I didn't see any special clarification on the LG website specs, I wonder if he got it wrong or that monitor is really crippled that way.
I've got a Samsung 213t 21 inch LCD, and I love it. I have an LG fridge, and I love t
What I'm looking for... (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm a student and rarely stay more than a year at the same place. I'm considering ditching my PC laptop for a 12" Powerbook + PS2 combo (unless you can find a GTA:SA and a Gran Turismo 4 Mac port), but I've failed to find a suitable monitor for both the PB and the PS2.
What I don't want:
having to carry an extra TV set just for the PS2.
having to bow to the TV licensing fee racket just to play a PS2 game.
having to use a VGA adapter for the PS2 - unless you know one that does not suck.
What I want:
a 17" LCD. Size matters, especially in dorms and when you're moving often.
a decent response time to play.
DVI input.
price tag in the 500-600 EUR range.
I have found LCDs with an S-Video input, but no DVI-D input. And their response times sucked more often than not. Am I stuck to the PC? I bet the first manufacturer to solve this problem would attract a lot of students.
Or do you know about an alternative that I might have missed?
Re:What I'm looking for... (Score:2, Interesting)
Take a look at these [scancom.ltd.uk].
The quality of most of the ones on there that I've seen generally beats the pants off most smallish TVs.
Re:What I'm looking for... (Score:2)
Off to sell a liver so I can afford them!
Re:What I'm looking for... (Score:1)
Re:What I'm looking for... (Score:1)
Widescreen browsing (Score:2)
I recently got a fancy Dell flatscreen display. You can physically rotate it 90 degrees to portrait mode. This is perfect for web browsing. Web pages are tall and narrow. I can see an entire Slashdot or Google News page at a glance.
For watching movies, and maybe some games, widescreen is nice. But for web browsing, tall scree
Large LCDs are great (Score:1)
Considering how much time we all spend in front of our monitors, it's worth spending a few extra bucks for the comfort and space of a nice LCD for sure.
Re:Large LCDs are great (Score:1)
Now for the down side, it's heavy as f*(K... I hate moving, have had to move it like 4 times in the past 4 years or so, since I got it, it was a mint back then, close to the same as this LG is now... but hey, I wanted size, and quality, so I pay for it in desk real-estate... a good sturdy desk is a must
but have been eying the 20"+ l
This screen is so old (Score:1)