Ok, I have a b**ch here. Has anyone else had a problem with burn in
on their 24 intel iMacs?
I recently took mine in for repair or replacement. They told me it
was burn in and wasn't covered by the warrantee. I've owned this
computer brand new since 6/09. It is on most of the time. But I
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 5:05 AM, Jeff Miles jmile...@charter.net wrote:
Ok, I have a b**ch here. Has anyone else had a problem with burn in
on their 24 intel iMacs?
I recently took mine in for repair or replacement. They told me it
was burn in and wasn't covered by the
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 7:00 AM, John Duncan Yoyo
johnduncany...@gmail.com wrote:
Apple support
recommends this method-quick version replace your screen saver image with an
all white one.
Personally, I recommend a totally blank, black screen, commonly
referred to as screen blanking. Any
On Nov 16, 2009, at 8:09 AM, phartz...@gmail.com wrote:
I realize that there are plenty of folks who, for whatever reason,
want to keep their personal computers fully running on all cylinders
at all times, never turning anything off or allowing any components go
to sleep ever. Do these folks
On Nov 16, 2009, at 5:05 AM, Jeff Miles wrote:
Ok, I have a b**ch here. Has anyone else had a problem with burn in
on their 24 intel iMacs?
No, but I have read it can happen. Unlike CRT burn-in, it is a
temporary situation. There are utility programs that can chase it away
sooner.
What
I too understood that LCD monitors can't have burn-in. But exactly
what is this 'persistence'? Clearly it's not burn-in, since that's a
permanent condition of the phosphors and cannot be fixed short of
replacing the crt.
I'd like to hear some sort of an explanation of this phenomenon, and
perhaps
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 11:50 AM, Tony B ton...@gmail.com wrote:
I too understood that LCD monitors can't have burn-in. But exactly
what is this 'persistence'? Clearly it's not burn-in, since that's a
permanent condition of the phosphors and cannot be fixed short of
replacing the crt.
I'd
I dunno, he kind of dances around the question of what actually causes
persistence:
What this does is cause the LCD crystals to have a memory for their location
in order to generate the colors of that graphic.
I'm not even sure that's valid English. I _am_ sure it makes no sense
to me. What is a
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 5:40 PM, Tony B ton...@gmail.com wrote:
I dunno, he kind of dances around the question of what actually causes
persistence:
What this does is cause the LCD crystals to have a memory for their
location in order to generate the colors of that graphic.
I'm not even sure
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 11:39 AM, tjpa t...@tjpa.com wrote:
In the non-Windows world 24/7 is normal. UNIX-based systems are not intended
to be turned off. This caused some grief in the early days of OS X if Macs
were turned off when clean-up scripts ran in the middle of the night. Recent
It's good to know this is something called persistence and will go
away with time, as compared to permanent burn-in. I've already seen
some of the cloudy persistence disappear, however the lines that
look like horizontal scratches are back. This is probably due to the
fact that I run
What would these utility programs be? I can't find one using Google.
All I find are apps for keeping file info unchanged.
Jeff Miles
jmile...@charter.net
Join my Mafia
http://apps.facebook.com/inthemafia/status_invite.php?from=550968726
On Nov 16, 2009, at 8:41 AM, tjpa wrote:
On Nov 16,
On Nov 16, 2009, at 6:18 PM, phartz...@gmail.com wrote:
Yeah, but those UNIX systems that you are mentioning were or are
mostly involved in business/professional operations, were they not?
Mac folk who are not slackers?
I think I might have found a reason, and hopefully a fix for my
problem. When I first got this new 24 iMac the display was set to
it's brightest, I'm assuming by default. The computer sits on my desk
at the same place the last ones have always sat. But the 24 screen
set at it's full
The Wikipedia article on LCD Persistence
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image_persistence) actually has a good
explanation, FWIW. Perhaps the reason I haven't seen this on any of
our monitors yet is because I have them all set to power down in 2-3
hours. I do not use screensavers.
The cause of
I usually have my systems set to blank the screen after a little
while. No Screen savers.
I also make it a point to turn off monitors (LCD/CRT)
Stewart
At 06:31 PM 11/16/2009, you wrote:
The Wikipedia article on LCD Persistence
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image_persistence) actually has a
On Nov 16, 2009, at 6:58 PM, Jeff Miles wrote:
What would these utility programs be? I can't find one using
Google. All I find are apps for keeping file info unchanged.
How To Fix Image Persistence On LCD Displays
http://www.syeager.org/misc/image_presistence.php
On Nov 16, 2009, at 6:53 PM, Jeff Miles wrote:
It's good to know this is something called persistence and will go
away with time, as compared to permanent burn-in. I've already seen
some of the cloudy persistence disappear, however the lines that
look like horizontal scratches are back.
On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 7:01 PM, tjpa t...@tjpa.com wrote:
Mac folk who are not slackers?
Are there some? All Hail Bob!!!
www.subgenius.com
Steve
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