Re: Monitor question

2010-12-30 Thread Bob Proulx
Johan Kullstam wrote:
 I had an old thinkpad t42 with a 14 1440x1050 and it rocked.  It
 weighed only 4.5 lbs even with cd drive.  For me, it was an optimal size
 and weight.  The current offerings are all inferior - they are heavier,
 have less vertical screen dimension and worse resolution.

And that is exactly why I am still using my IBM ThinkPad T42 with
exactly that configuration.  It does everything I need a laptop to do.
It has the best keyboard of any laptop I have ever used.  But mostly
because all of the newer machines are less suitable.  It is hard to
upgrade to something that isn't as good.

Bob


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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-30 Thread Klistvud

Dne, 30. 12. 2010 06:58:42 je Stan Hoeppner napisal(a):

Johan Kullstam put forth on 12/29/2010 11:25 PM:

 Good for you.  My gripe is that one can no longer choose.  It's
 shortscreen or nothing.

 I had an old thinkpad t42 with a 14 1440x1050 and it rocked.  It
 weighed only 4.5 lbs even with cd drive.  For me, it was an optimal  
size
 and weight.  The current offerings are all inferior - they are  
heavier,

 have less vertical screen dimension and worse resolution.

You're a member of a super-minority Johan.  The majority of the
marketplace wants wide screen, which is why you're finding little or
nothing else but widescreen.  Even the little toy netbook computers  
all

have widescreen LCDs.  That's very telling about the market.

--
Stan


personal and highly biased rant
I would go with George Carlin here: When you see how stupid an average  
consumer is, consider that half of them are even more stupid than that.


The majority of the marketplace doesn't want widescreen any more that  
it wants Digital Rights Management -- and yet it gets both rammed  
down its throat (or, sometimes, up some other orifice). Why is that?  
It's because they're too stupid (or careless) to really know what they  
want. Vendors, on the other hand, know *extremely* well what they want  
(to cut costs, increase production volume, increase market share etc.).


It's not hard to imagine what happens when the twain -- an extremely  
cunning and an extremely careless subject -- meet: it happens on a  
daily basis, and it's called the marketplace. The place you go to  
when you want to get royally scr***d.


In an ideal world, you could counter that simply by being a well  
informed consumer instead of a careless one. In the real world,  
however, everything has already been decided in advance: usually, by  
the vendors and by the most careless and most uninformed -- the  
majority.

/personal and highly biased rant

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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-30 Thread Brad Rogers
On Wed, 29 Dec 2010 23:58:42 -0600
Stan Hoeppner s...@hardwarefreak.com wrote:

Hello Stan,

 You're a member of a super-minority Johan.  The majority of the
 marketplace wants wide screen, which is why you're finding little or

The market wants what the market gets is more true than The market
gets what the market wants.

IOW, more often than not, what we get is dictated to us, rather what is
what people /actually/ want.  In no small part due to the fact that, by
and large, people don't really know what they want(1).

(1) People frequenting this ML almost certainly don't fall into that
category.  However, we're very much a minority of the computer buying
public.

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/ _)radnever immediately apparent
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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-30 Thread Johan Kullstam
Bob Proulx b...@proulx.com writes:

 Johan Kullstam wrote:
 I had an old thinkpad t42 with a 14 1440x1050 and it rocked.  It
 weighed only 4.5 lbs even with cd drive.  For me, it was an optimal size
 and weight.  The current offerings are all inferior - they are heavier,
 have less vertical screen dimension and worse resolution.

 And that is exactly why I am still using my IBM ThinkPad T42 with
 exactly that configuration.  It does everything I need a laptop to do.
 It has the best keyboard of any laptop I have ever used.  But mostly
 because all of the newer machines are less suitable.  It is hard to
 upgrade to something that isn't as good.

I would still be using mine but lightning wiped it out.  I got a strike
near the house and it came through the cablemodem and ethernet.

I have a t500 now.  It has a much faster CPU, a decent screen, but it is
bigger and heavier.

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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-30 Thread Chris Jones
On Thu, Dec 30, 2010 at 12:58:42AM EST, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
 Johan Kullstam put forth on 12/29/2010 11:25 PM:

  Good for you.  My gripe is that one can no longer choose.  It's
  shortscreen or nothing.
  
  I had an old thinkpad t42 with a 14 1440x1050 and it rocked.  It
  weighed only 4.5 lbs even with cd drive.  For me, it was an optimal
  size and weight.  The current offerings are all inferior - they are
  heavier, have less vertical screen dimension and worse resolution.
 
 You're a member of a super-minority Johan.  

Nobody would deny that IT professionals are a tiny minority. Even if you
add the comparatively much larger numbers of non-IT professionals, you
are looking at a small share of the market, and not the most profitable
thereof. The masses have much lower expectations/exigencies, resulting
in higher margins. In a somewhat different walk of life, even Blackberry
have gotten wise to these aspects and are now focusing on producing for
the masses.

 The majority of the marketplace wants wide screen, which is why you're
 finding little or nothing else but widescreen.  Even the little toy
 netbook computers all have widescreen LCDs.

And using them for anything but entertainment (movies, video  TV
streaming, gaming..) is a nightmare. I was configuring one lately,
1024x600 screen resolution, out-of-the-box ubuntu/gnome desktop and even
with a very small font, and I frequently had to use Alt+left mouse to
drag the popup dialogs upwards: the ‘OK’, ‘cancel’ buttons were
off-screen.

Fortunately, I don't use GUI's much on my own machines, so I'm quite
flexible, but right now it looks like 10+ years of tweaking the ergonomy
of the desktop has gone down the tube in a matter of a few months. 

The only way out of this dilemma would appear to start off with the
highest available resolution you can lay your hands on - ie. HDTV's
1080p, and try to recreate a sane 4:3 screen or thereabout and use only
part of the display¹.

As long as you are able to get such a portable system that features such
high resolution, that is.

I recently looked at the Thinkpad offering, and Lenovo's specs and
customization pages have become extremely vague about the actual pixel
dimensions of the displays available for their different models. From
what I have seen, it looks like all Thinkpads except the 15 lbs. 17
W701ds come with 1600x900 as the highest resolution. And more often than
not that is only an option. Now that's precisely 30% shorter than the
hi-res screens of the past decade - ie. 1600x1200 or the wide-screen
1920x1200, and still 15% less height than the 1400x1050 that was
commonly featured on 15 laptops before the advent of wide screens. 

Among other things, what this means is that you will have to use smaller
fonts to make an entire page of a pdf document fit on one screen. To the
point where you have to lean forward to read comfortably. And this is
even more of a problem when the document you are viewing features the
standard A4 paper size rather than U.S. letter because pages are an
extra 8.5% taller.

 That's very telling about the market.

As in.. whatever the suckers' preferences, one size fits all makes good
economic sense from the vendor/manufacturer's perspective?

cj

¹ Ubuntu's new ‘Unity’ desktop appears to be a move in that direction.


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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-29 Thread Johan Kullstam
Gilbert Sullivan whirly...@comcast.net writes:

 On 12/28/2010 09:40 AM, Klistvud wrote:
 It's also horrible for web browsing, and for many other tasks. It
 actually only has two uses I can think of: widescreen movies and
 side-by-side document viewing. Given that movies are best viewed on
 large TV sets anyway, the usefulness of widescreen computer monitors is
 further reduced to just side-by-side document viewing. Arguably, even
 for that task, dual-head setups are better.

 On the other hand, there are those of us who must use portable systems
 for side-by-side document reading and/or tiled terminal window use
 while traveling and are, thus, limited to a single screen. Widescreen
 works better for us.

Good for you.  My gripe is that one can no longer choose.  It's
shortscreen or nothing.

I had an old thinkpad t42 with a 14 1440x1050 and it rocked.  It
weighed only 4.5 lbs even with cd drive.  For me, it was an optimal size
and weight.  The current offerings are all inferior - they are heavier,
have less vertical screen dimension and worse resolution.

 My portable systems have 1920x1200 LCDs. I'm so
 accustomed to them that I don't bother with multi-monitor setups at
 home or at the office any more. Just one widescreen setup suffices,
 and I don't have to fiddle around switching between multi-monitor and
 single monitor setups any more.

 My totally unbiased and scientific $.02.

 ;-)

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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-29 Thread Stan Hoeppner
Johan Kullstam put forth on 12/29/2010 11:25 PM:

 Good for you.  My gripe is that one can no longer choose.  It's
 shortscreen or nothing.
 
 I had an old thinkpad t42 with a 14 1440x1050 and it rocked.  It
 weighed only 4.5 lbs even with cd drive.  For me, it was an optimal size
 and weight.  The current offerings are all inferior - they are heavier,
 have less vertical screen dimension and worse resolution.

You're a member of a super-minority Johan.  The majority of the
marketplace wants wide screen, which is why you're finding little or
nothing else but widescreen.  Even the little toy netbook computers all
have widescreen LCDs.  That's very telling about the market.

-- 
Stan


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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-29 Thread John Jason Jordan
On Thu, 30 Dec 2010 00:25:19 -0500
Johan Kullstam kullstj...@verizon.net dijo:

Good for you.  My gripe is that one can no longer choose.  It's
shortscreen or nothing.

I had an old thinkpad t42 with a 14 1440x1050 and it rocked.  It
weighed only 4.5 lbs even with cd drive.  For me, it was an optimal
size and weight.  The current offerings are all inferior - they are
heavier, have less vertical screen dimension and worse resolution.

Your complaint is exactly the same as a local friend of mine, a
long-time Linux user who also used a T42 for a long time. He actually
retrofitted a tall screen onto a (I believe) T61, which he runs at
2000xsomething. I'll forward your e-mail to him so he can respond with
instructions, if he wants. He probably will respond, as he is at least
as annoyed by widescreens as you are.


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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-29 Thread Doug

On 12/30/2010 12:58 AM, Stan Hoeppner wrote:

Johan Kullstam put forth on 12/29/2010 11:25 PM:


Good for you.  My gripe is that one can no longer choose.  It's
shortscreen or nothing.

I had an old thinkpad t42 with a 14 1440x1050 and it rocked.  It
weighed only 4.5 lbs even with cd drive.  For me, it was an optimal size
and weight.  The current offerings are all inferior - they are heavier,
have less vertical screen dimension and worse resolution.

You're a member of a super-minority Johan.  The majority of the
marketplace wants wide screen, which is why you're finding little or
nothing else but widescreen.  Even the little toy netbook computers all
have widescreen LCDs.  That's very telling about the market.

I don't think so.  But the whole bunch of us who have no use for 
wide-screen
have been basically ignored by the vendors. I don't have room for a 23 
wide-

screen that would have the same screen height as my 19 old-fashioned
monitor. How many people watch movies on their computers? That's
what TVs are for. Just before the standard monitors disappeared, I bought
another.

Well, let's face it--the mfrs sell a lot more TVs than computer monitors, so
that's what they make.  The computing public be damned!

--doug

--
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M. Greeley


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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-28 Thread Eduardo M KALINOWSKI

On Seg, 27 Dez 2010, Stan Hoeppner wrote:

I built my folks a new PC last year (Athlon II X2 Rigor 2.8 w/ ATI north
bridge video) and got them a 24 Asus widescreen LCD to go with it.  Dad
is 73 Mom is 68.  Dad wears trifocals and Mom bifocals.  No matter what
font size (WinXP) I selected, the native 1920x1080 panel res just didn't
work for them although it was perfect for me.  I ended up setting the
res at 1280x720 with small fonts.  It's not as sharp (to me) but perfect
for them, and they can't fathom how they got along with a 17 MAG CRT
for for the 5 prior years.  Dad no longer has to lean forward and tilt
his head back simultaneously.  I'm surprised the old 17 CRT didn't
cause a permanent craning of his neck.


Windows (at least XP, I'm not sure if Vista/7 changed that) suck a lot  
in this regard (and others too, but I digress). Linux does much better.


I don't know how exactly it is done, but Linux takes into account the  
actual size of the display (which is reported along its supported  
resolutions) and not only the resolution to determine font sizes (and  
maybe icon sizes or other dimensions of the visual UI, but I have not  
experimented with that). So you get reasonably easy to read (for  
people with good eyesight, at least) fonts at all displays, at all  
resolutions. Under WinXP, if you use a high resolution, you get tiny  
fonts.




--
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Eduardo M KALINOWSKI
edua...@kalinowski.com.br


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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-28 Thread Andrei Popescu
On Ma, 28 dec 10, 09:13:00, Eduardo M KALINOWSKI wrote:
 
 I don't know how exactly it is done, but Linux takes into account
 the actual size of the display (which is reported along its
 supported resolutions) and not only the resolution to determine font
 sizes (and maybe icon sizes or other dimensions of the visual UI,
 but I have not experimented with that). So you get reasonably easy
 to read (for people with good eyesight, at least) fonts at all
 displays, at all resolutions. Under WinXP, if you use a high
 resolution, you get tiny fonts.

Am I the only one experiencing this?
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=23705

(Summary: Xorg forces 96 DPI and it is impossible to change it)

Ok, it doesn't happen with the non-free nvidia driver (and possibly also 
not with fglrx), but I expected a lot more people to use free drivers 
here.

Regards,
Andrei
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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-28 Thread Klistvud

Dne, 28. 12. 2010 08:24:22 je George napisal(a):

If you do your work in text mode, why do you want a widescreen  
monitor?
Widescreen is good for films but horrible when it comes to reading,  
which is

what you normally use your computer for.


It's also horrible for web browsing, and for many other tasks. It  
actually only has two uses I can think of: widescreen movies and  
side-by-side document viewing. Given that movies are best viewed on  
large TV sets anyway, the usefulness of widescreen computer monitors is  
further reduced to just side-by-side document viewing. Arguably, even  
for that task, dual-head setups are better.


Why is it then that the widescreen standard has taken over the computer  
market so preponderously? Well, forcing the widescreen format allows  
the manufacturers to charge us the *same* amount of money for a  
*reduced* screen real estate. It's all about marketing (also called  
indoctrination, or brainwashing): making buyers gladly accept less bang  
for the buck. Sadly, as many times before, we, the consumers, have  
allowed them to force this new obnoxiousness upon us without moving a  
finger.


Let me give examples which will hopefully corroborate my assertions  
(the numbers given are however just illustrations and far from  
accurate).


The widescreen fad allows a vendor to make a LCD panel having the  
overall area of a 15 classic panel (roughly), and market it as a 19  
monitor. To get (roughly) the same vertical size as with a classic 32  
TV, you now have to buy a 42 widescreen TV set. Of course, a 42  
widescreen TV is much wider than a classic 32, no arguing with that:  
it may also be seen as a widened 32 TV, a 32 TV expanded with two  
additional lateral bands. Incidentally, a figure of 42 is also a lot  
more impressive (and easier to market) than a humble 32.


Maximum laptop width is limited -- by ergonomic and other factors --  
roughly to ca. 40 cm. Well, with the widescreen format, that limitation  
allows a far smaller screen real estate than classic 4:3 screens did.  
In other words, the usefulness of laptops for serious display-dependent  
work has arguably *decreased* over the last decade or so. This trend is  
further enhanced with laptops progressively becoming more convenient,  
and more of a toy than a work tool.


About a decade ago, the absolute minimum resolution for LCD laptop  
screens was 1024x768. Finding 800x600 laptops was becoming increasingly  
difficult, and the standard was moving toward higher resolutions, such  
as 1600x1200 etc. A decade later, additionally spurred by the netbook  
fad, the absolute minimum is again set back to around 1024x600 or less,  
with entry-level laptops generally having a meagre 1360x768 resolution.  
Compare these numbers to, say, CPU speeds or hard drive capacities over  
the same period, and tell me the LCD marketing guys aren't sheer  
geniuses!


Of course, this is strictly my personal, and quite biased, point of  
view.


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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-28 Thread Gilbert Sullivan

On 12/28/2010 09:40 AM, Klistvud wrote:

It's also horrible for web browsing, and for many other tasks. It
actually only has two uses I can think of: widescreen movies and
side-by-side document viewing. Given that movies are best viewed on
large TV sets anyway, the usefulness of widescreen computer monitors is
further reduced to just side-by-side document viewing. Arguably, even
for that task, dual-head setups are better.


On the other hand, there are those of us who must use portable systems 
for side-by-side document reading and/or tiled terminal window use while 
traveling and are, thus, limited to a single screen. Widescreen works 
better for us. My portable systems have 1920x1200 LCDs. I'm so 
accustomed to them that I don't bother with multi-monitor setups at home 
or at the office any more. Just one widescreen setup suffices, and I 
don't have to fiddle around switching between multi-monitor and single 
monitor setups any more.


My totally unbiased and scientific $.02.

;-)


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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-28 Thread Klistvud

Dne, 28. 12. 2010 15:49:26 je Paul Cartwright napisal(a):

On 12/28/2010 09:40 AM, Klistvud wrote:

 It's also horrible for web browsing, and for many other tasks. It
 actually only has two uses I can think of: widescreen movies and
 side-by-side document viewing. Given that movies are best viewed on
 large TV sets anyway, the usefulness of widescreen computer  
monitors is
 further reduced to just side-by-side document viewing. Arguably,  
even

 for that task, dual-head setups are better.

so ( I'm REALLY late into this thread) what you are saying is, I  
should

opt for dual-monitors rather than1 LARGER monitor? I had never even
considered dual monitors for HOME use, I always thought it was a work
thingie.. Right now I have a 20 flat panel, but I ALSO still have my
old 17 flat panel that I use for my server.. I could I suspect, add
IT to my desktop  make it dual monitors.. what would I need, another
video card the same as my current NVidia card, or would it matter?



I was only making a point; I have no direct experience with dual-head  
setups. That said, I've seen them used in home environments too. I  
guess it's your call really. As one of the posters said, given a big  
enough monitor ( 30), a single monitor can competently replace a  
dual-head setup. Not in all use cases though. Dual-head setups allow  
you to have, say, a VT on one monitor and a desktop environment on the  
other, or a desktop on one monitor and a full-screen video (or OpenGL  
game) on the other -- things not possible with a single monitor, AFAIK.  
On the other hand, dual-head setups do (generally) require an  
additional video card and they are (generally again) more complex and  
harder to set up. You have to consider what you'll be using your setup  
for; persaonally, I'd be more than happy with, say, a single monitor,  
as long as it was at least  28. Currently I'm on a 15 laptop LCD and  
am not happy with it.


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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-28 Thread Camaleón
On Tue, 28 Dec 2010 19:11:28 +0100, Klistvud wrote:

 Dne, 28. 12. 2010 15:49:26 je Paul Cartwright napisal(a):
 On 12/28/2010 09:40 AM, Klistvud wrote:
 
  It's also horrible for web browsing, and for many other tasks. It
  actually only has two uses I can think of: widescreen movies and
  side-by-side document viewing. Given that movies are best viewed on
  large TV sets anyway, the usefulness of widescreen computer
 monitors is
  further reduced to just side-by-side document viewing. Arguably,
 even
  for that task, dual-head setups are better.
 
 so ( I'm REALLY late into this thread) what you are saying is, I should
 opt for dual-monitors rather than1 LARGER monitor? I had never even
 considered dual monitors for HOME use, I always thought it was a work
 thingie.. Right now I have a 20 flat panel, but I ALSO still have my
 old 17 flat panel that I use for my server.. I could I suspect, add
 IT to my desktop  make it dual monitors.. what would I need, another
 video card the same as my current NVidia card, or would it matter?

I'm currently using that setup with lenny on a computer used for 
displaying presentations, videos and photos at the office. I'm using one 
video card with dual head capabilities (an old nvidia 7600GS) and here I 
use the closed nvidia driver. Setup was plain easy (in twinview mode, 
the two displays act as separated screens so I can launch two 
applications and get them maximized on each screen).

There are VGA cards that allow to manage up to 4 displays with just one 
card attached :-)

 I was only making a point; I have no direct experience with dual-head
 setups. That said, I've seen them used in home environments too. I
 guess it's your call really. As one of the posters said, given a big
 enough monitor ( 30), a single monitor can competently replace a
 dual-head setup. Not in all use cases though. Dual-head setups allow you
 to have, say, a VT on one monitor and a desktop environment on the
 other, or a desktop on one monitor and a full-screen video (or OpenGL
 game) on the other -- things not possible with a single monitor, AFAIK.
 On the other hand, dual-head setups do (generally) require an additional
 video card and they are (generally again) more complex and harder to set
 up. You have to consider what you'll be using your setup for;
 persaonally, I'd be more than happy with, say, a single monitor, as long
 as it was at least  28. Currently I'm on a 15 laptop LCD and am not
 happy with it.

I've used both (large displays -24- and dual head setups -2 displays of 
19-) and having one large screen is not that easy in linux systems 
(windows are hard to position in the screen and dimensions are forgotten 
very easily so you end up moving windows all the time :-P).

Greetings,

-- 
Camaleón


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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-28 Thread Chris Jones
On Mon, Dec 27, 2010 at 08:46:38PM EST, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
 Chris Jones put forth on 12/27/2010 7:00 PM:
  On Mon, Dec 27, 2010 at 10:57:31AM EST, Camaleón wrote:

  On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 10:30:57 -0500, Mark Neidorff wrote:
  
  [..]
  
  When it comes to LCD/TFT, you have to pay attention to native
  resolution. 
  
  I agree. And the highest you can get. 

 Not necessarily.  This is highly dependent on the users(s) of the
 monitor.
 
 I built my folks a new PC last year (Athlon II X2 Rigor 2.8 w/ ATI
 north bridge video) and got them a 24 Asus widescreen LCD to go with
 it.  Dad is 73 Mom is 68.  Dad wears trifocals and Mom bifocals.  No
 matter what font size (WinXP) 

[..]

My remark was to be taken in the context of environments that are
configurable to the users' rather than the vendor's preferences. 

;-)

cj


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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-27 Thread Camaleón
On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 10:30:57 -0500, Mark Neidorff wrote:

 Running Lenny updated.
 I'm wondering what I lose if I switch to a large wide screen monitor.  I
 currently have a regular 17 Viewsonic (VP171s).  Works fine, but
 since my eyes are getting older, I'm tempted by the crop of wide screen
 25 monitors on the market.  If you want to tell me how great a
 particular brand of monitor is, please e-mail me off the list (I don't
 want to start a flame war on the list).  My systems currently use the
 on-board video that comes with the motherboards.  (I have multiple
 systems connected to the monitor)  For my server, I want to keep using
 the on-board video, but for my desktop machine, putting in a video card
 is not out of the question.

When it comes to LCD/TFT, you have to pay attention to native resolution. 
Look, 17 displays tend to use the same resolution (dots per inch) than 
19 ones (1280x1024) so people tend to think they gain when buying a 17 
screen because they get the same viewable area but they pay less (17 
monitors are cheaper).

But I prefer to stick to 19 LCD screens (and avoid as much as I can 
those wide/narrow screens, 16:9 or 16:10) because text and icons are 
larger than in 17 displays and I get a good resolution (1280x1024 is 
better than a wide screen (1280x800).

As per display brand, I like Eizo the most. They are very expensive but 
they provide a superb quality :-}

 So, questions:
 1. Will my on-board video cards be able to drive a new monitor to full
 resolution?  If not, will I be able to run the GUI in a usable fashion
 or will I get a fuzzy display or will there be other compromises?

Modern cards, yes, they are capable of managing higher resolutions. Check 
your card specs to be sure.

 2. Are there monitors that do not support text mode out there?  I'm
 asking because I do as much work on my server as possible in text mode,
 only using X when absolutely necessary.  I also feel the need to watch
 the boot messages go by at times.  If a monitor can't display text mode,
 then it will be useless to me.

I don't think so. You will only have to setup the resolution that fits 
your needs.
 
 3. Are there any other general suggestions about the wide screen
 monitors that I should be aware of?

None that I can think, just care about resolution, it can be misleading.

OTOH, you can always adjust your DPI to a higher value (i.e., 120dpi) so 
while you keep your current/recommended resolution, all, icons and text 
will display bigger and your eyes will suffer less :-)

Greetings,

-- 
Camaleón


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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-27 Thread Chris Jones
On Mon, Dec 27, 2010 at 10:57:31AM EST, Camaleón wrote:
 On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 10:30:57 -0500, Mark Neidorff wrote:

[..]

 When it comes to LCD/TFT, you have to pay attention to native
 resolution. 

I agree. And the highest you can get. 

 Look, 17 displays tend to use the same resolution (dots per inch)
 than 19 ones (1280x1024) so people tend to think they gain when
 buying a 17 screen because they get the same viewable area but they
 pay less (17 monitors are cheaper).

Being near-sighted, a 17 monitor suits me best: with larger monitors,
I am so close to the display that I constantly have to move my head to
the right, to the left, to the right.. and end up with a crick in the
neck. :-)

 But I prefer to stick to 19 LCD screens (and avoid as much as I can
 those wide/narrow screens, 16:9 or 16:10) because text and icons are
 larger than in 17 displays and I get a good resolution (1280x1024 is
 better than a wide screen (1280x800).

Have you had too much champagne over the holiday? :-) 

Last time I looked, all _affordable_ monitors I could find were 16:9
aka. Hollywood's preferred 1080p. And as far as recent laptop models are
concerned, they are all 16:9. From what I understand, the manufacturers
have stopped making proper _computer_ displays.

The 4:3 aspect ratio displays that I like.. or the possibly even better
5:4 that you recommend are pretty much a thing of the past. If I had the
money, I might purchase a couple of QSXGA 2560x2048 screens right now..
while they last. But apart from the fact that I am unsure they would
play well with X/linux and run-of-the-mill hardware, the price of such
fiends is rather a deterrent.

[..]

 OTOH, you can always adjust your DPI to a higher value (i.e., 120dpi) so 
 while you keep your current/recommended resolution, all, icons and text 
 will display bigger and your eyes will suffer less :-)

Yes, that's usually the sensible approach when you want to stick with
the native resolution of your physical screen (as you should) and
globally adjust the size of your fonts, icons, etc. to whatever suits
your particular preferences or your eyesight's idiosyncrasies. 

I have noticed that out of the box, and before you fool him by running
X with a lower dpi (such as 96), gnome presents you with large fonts and
icons that make your high-res display look as if it were a 1024x768 or
less. Rather than change font sizes in all kind of never obvious places,
reduce the height or the panels, etc. it is considerably easier and more
reliable to change the dpi and restart X.

cj


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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-27 Thread Stan Hoeppner
Chris Jones put forth on 12/27/2010 7:00 PM:
 On Mon, Dec 27, 2010 at 10:57:31AM EST, Camaleón wrote:
 On Fri, 24 Dec 2010 10:30:57 -0500, Mark Neidorff wrote:
 
 [..]
 
 When it comes to LCD/TFT, you have to pay attention to native
 resolution. 
 
 I agree. And the highest you can get. 

Not necessarily.  This is highly dependent on the users(s) of the monitor.

I built my folks a new PC last year (Athlon II X2 Rigor 2.8 w/ ATI north
bridge video) and got them a 24 Asus widescreen LCD to go with it.  Dad
is 73 Mom is 68.  Dad wears trifocals and Mom bifocals.  No matter what
font size (WinXP) I selected, the native 1920x1080 panel res just didn't
work for them although it was perfect for me.  I ended up setting the
res at 1280x720 with small fonts.  It's not as sharp (to me) but perfect
for them, and they can't fathom how they got along with a 17 MAG CRT
for for the 5 prior years.  Dad no longer has to lean forward and tilt
his head back simultaneously.  I'm surprised the old 17 CRT didn't
cause a permanent craning of his neck.

-- 
Stan



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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-27 Thread George
On Fri, Dec 24, 2010 at 5:30 PM, Mark Neidorff m...@neidorff.com wrote:

 I'm tempted by the crop of wide screen 25 monitors on the market.

snip

 2. Are there monitors that do not support text mode out there?  I'm asking
 because I do as much work on my server as possible in text mode, only using X
 when absolutely necessary.  I also feel the need to watch the boot messages
 go by at times.  If a monitor can't display text mode, then it will be
 useless to me.

If you do your work in text mode, why do you want a widescreen monitor?
Widescreen is good for films but horrible when it comes to reading, which is
what you normally use your computer for.


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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-24 Thread godo

On 12/24/2010 04:30 PM, Mark Neidorff wrote:

Hi Folks,

Running Lenny updated.
I'm wondering what I lose if I switch to a large wide screen monitor.  I
currently have a regular 17 Viewsonic (VP171s).  Works fine, but since my
eyes are getting older, I'm tempted by the crop of wide screen 25 monitors
on the market.  If you want to tell me how great a particular brand of
monitor is, please e-mail me off the list (I don't want to start a flame war
on the list).  My systems currently use the on-board video that comes with
the motherboards.  (I have multiple systems connected to the monitor)  For my
server, I want to keep using the on-board video, but for my desktop machine,
putting in a video card is not out of the question.

So, questions:
1. Will my on-board video cards be able to drive a new monitor to full
resolution?  If not, will I be able to run the GUI in a usable fashion or
will I get a fuzzy display or will there be other compromises?

Probably will but that depends on video card specification.
If your video card is capable of XxY resolution and your monitor will 
have the same than everything will be ok.


2. Are there monitors that do not support text mode out there?


I don't think so.

3. Are there any other general suggestions about the wide screen monitors that
I should be aware of?

Thanks,

Mark


Probably everything will work just fine. In Lenny period I switched from 
19 CRT to 24 LCD without a problem.


--
Bye,
Goran Dobosevic
Hrvatski: www.dobosevic.com
 English: www.dobosevic.com/en/
Registered Linux User #503414


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Re: Monitor question

2010-12-24 Thread John Foster

On 12/24/2010 9:30 AM, Mark Neidorff wrote:

Hi Folks,

Running Lenny updated.
I'm wondering what I lose if I switch to a large wide screen monitor.  I
currently have a regular 17 Viewsonic (VP171s).  Works fine, but since my
eyes are getting older, I'm tempted by the crop of wide screen 25 monitors
on the market.  If you want to tell me how great a particular brand of
monitor is, please e-mail me off the list (I don't want to start a flame war
on the list).  My systems currently use the on-board video that comes with
the motherboards.  (I have multiple systems connected to the monitor)  For my
server, I want to keep using the on-board video, but for my desktop machine,
putting in a video card is not out of the question.
Well the obvious issues are: what type of CPU are you using: What type 
of video is onboard (does it use dedicated RAM);
how much memory are you using for the entire system. Lenny is very 
capable of doing what you want, If you do decide to buy a new monitor 
then I can reccommend a Viewsonic as a good fairly inexpensive model. I 
recently built a new server  have a 23 Viewsonic doing nicely. Be sure 
to watch for rebates also, some good deals out there now. If you do buy 
a new one with a new video card, make sure you get both that have HDMI 
inputs  outputs. ATI video cards use propriatary drivers but they are 
fairly up to date in Debian now  you can actually get installable ones 
from ATI themselves. I personally like the Gigabit cards with ATI 
chipsets. I use a dual card setup with the crossfire mode activated. It 
allows streaming live full 1080p video. I'm sure there are many 
solutions for your concerns, these are just from my own experience  YMMV!

So, questions:
1. Will my on-board video cards be able to drive a new monitor to full
resolution?  If not, will I be able to run the GUI in a usable fashion or
will I get a fuzzy display or will there be other compromises?

pretty much answered above.



2. Are there monitors that do not support text mode out there?  I'm asking
because I do as much work on my server as possible in text mode, only using X
when absolutely necessary.  I also feel the need to watch the boot messages
go by at times.  If a monitor can't display text mode, then it will be
useless to me.

No problem there with any of them.

3. Are there any other general suggestions about the wide screen monitors that
I should be aware of?


Can only be answered if we know what you want form the monitor.
FYI: if you just want an easier to read screen text resolution, then 
reset it in the boot menue.
X will be reset anyways to what ever is avaliable on the monitor.  is 
easily finetuned.

Thanks,

Mark




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John Foster


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Re: Monitor Question: 20 Wide

2006-10-21 Thread Ron Johnson
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 10/21/06 06:58, Chris wrote:
 Hello,
 
 Can anyone make any suggestions for 20 flatscreen monitors?
 
 How can I tell if my Graphics Hardware will support the monitors resolution.  
 1600x1200 or 1680x1050 for instance.  man radeon contains no information 
 about supported resolutions.
 
 My hardware is:
 
 01:00.1 Display controller: ATI Technologies Inc Radeon RV250 [Radeon 9000] 
 (Secondary) (rev 01)
 
 And I'm running testing with xorg 7.0.22

Almost certainly it will.  Especially if it has .GE. 32MB video RAM.

- --
Ron Johnson, Jr.
Jefferson LA  USA

Is common sense really valid?
For example, it is common sense to white-power racists that
whites are superior to blacks, and that those with brown skins
are mud people.
However, that common sense is obviously wrong.
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Version: GnuPG v1.4.5 (GNU/Linux)

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Re: Monitor Question: 20 Wide

2006-10-21 Thread Uwe Dippel
On Sat, 21 Oct 2006 13:58:33 +0200, Chris wrote:

 How can I tell if my Graphics Hardware will support the monitors resolution.  
 1600x1200 or 1680x1050 for instance.  man radeon contains no information 
 about supported resolutions.

I can tell you that my 9200 three years ago supported 1920X1200; with blob
fglrx, though.

Uwe



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Re: Monitor Question: 20 Wide

2006-10-21 Thread Justin Piszcz


On Sat, 21 Oct 2006, Chris wrote:

 Hello,
 
 Can anyone make any suggestions for 20 flatscreen monitors?
 
 How can I tell if my Graphics Hardware will support the monitors resolution.  
 1600x1200 or 1680x1050 for instance.  man radeon contains no information 
 about supported resolutions.
 
 My hardware is:
 
 01:00.1 Display controller: ATI Technologies Inc Radeon RV250 [Radeon 9000] 
 (Secondary) (rev 01)
 
 And I'm running testing with xorg 7.0.22
 
 Thanks,
 
 Chris
 -- 
 C. Hurschler
 
 
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I think the first question you have to ask yourself is: what monitor do 
you have and what is the recommended resolution for your paritcular LCD? 

Justin.


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Re: Monitor Question: 20 Wide

2006-10-21 Thread Chris
On Saturday 21 October 2006 18:55, Justin Piszcz wrote:
 On Sat, 21 Oct 2006, Chris wrote:
  Hello,
 
  Can anyone make any suggestions for 20 flatscreen monitors?
 
  How can I tell if my Graphics Hardware will support the monitors
  resolution. 1600x1200 or 1680x1050 for instance.  man radeon contains no
  information about supported resolutions.
 
  My hardware is:
 
  01:00.1 Display controller: ATI Technologies Inc Radeon RV250 [Radeon
  9000] (Secondary) (rev 01)
 
  And I'm running testing with xorg 7.0.22
 
  Thanks,
 
  Chris
  --
  C. Hurschler
 
 
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 I think the first question you have to ask yourself is: what monitor do
 you have and what is the recommended resolution for your paritcular LCD?


I'm thinking about what monitor to get, and I'd like not to have to buy a new 
graphics card.

Chris

-- 
C. Hurschler


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