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I've been wanting to get a large monitor for my laptop for some time now, but I have no idea how to go about buying one or configuring one for my set-up.

Still, with that level of incompetence under my belt, I tried three different places to shop for monitors: Staples, Best Buy, and Frys.

Frys was the worst of all three. This rather surprised me, as I've come to expect better from them, but the guy literally told me that he didn't think I was interested in buying a monitor that day and he had other people waiting. The "other people" were an older couple who he proceeded to bamboolze with talk about how the machine he was selling was "on sale today only" and "worth every penny" and so forth.

Best Buy was a little better. When I told the guy I was using Linux he said, "Oh, I don't think any of our monitors support that." But kudos to him for at least letting me hook up the laptop to his monitors and try them out. We got some working, but I didn't think the resolution was all that great.

And Staples was the best: the woman let me try just about any monitor, and really did try harder to sell me something.

Still, I don't have a large-scale monitor for digital editing yet. And I could really use one. Just a cheap one, you know, something 21" and about $160 or so. Anyone know of a good one for a widescreen laptop?

Date: 2009-10-08 11:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nojay.livejournal.com
You mentioned using this monitor for "digital editing"... Low-cost monitors sold for business and home use are 6-bits per colour channel. They fake 8-bits by multiplexing to be able to advertise 16.7 million colours. These are normally labelled as having STN or DSTN panels. If you want real colour gamut accuracy for video or photo editing you have to pay more for 8 bits per channel panels. Look for terms like S-IPS or S-PVA in the panel technology. The best monitors will have a gamut better than 100% of the standard Adobe screen gamut.

For example, Dell do several 20" LCD monitors -- the 2007FP has a wide colour gamut S-PVA panel and costs 280 quid in the UK. The IN2010N is the same size monitor and costs a bit over a hundred quid but it doesn't have the same colour response. It's OK for general text editing, spreadsheets, emails etc. and it will even do a half-decent job on graphics and images but using the higher-gamut screens makes it very obvious the lower-gamut monitors lack colour definition and fidelity.

Date: 2009-10-12 01:18 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ewhac.livejournal.com
What nojay said.

I found this page (http://www.pchardwarehelp.com/guides/lcd-panel-types.php) very helpful explaining the tech and tradeoffs.

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