I don't recommend getting a smaller then 24 inch 1920x1200 monitor or letters will be disturbingly small. 23' at most.
larger DPI settings dont always work properly and zooming in every time you want to read something can be a pain too. a 21.5 inch 16:9 monitor is physically small to and not even as tall as a regular 17 inch monitor. a 23 or 24 inch is much better for a 1920x1080 for most people.Personally I find this kind of talk ridiculous. High DPI is a good thing in a monitor and if you have any problems reading text you just zoom in using your web browser, acrobat, word, or whatever program you are using. Worst case you just use a larger DPI setting in windows. The only reason a physically bigger monitor would be better is if you're watching movies or sitting far away, otherwise the picture will always be less sharp and there's nothing you can do to fix that besides sit farther away.
I've got a a 17" LCD at 1600 x 1024 and it's great for work and I have no problems with it being too small. I also have a 42" TV at 1920 x 1080 and it's great for entertainment (though I sit several feet away).
Personally I find this kind of talk ridiculous. High DPI is a good thing in a monitor and if you have any problems reading text you just zoom in using your web browser, acrobat, word, or whatever program you are using. Worst case you just use a larger DPI setting in windows. The only reason a physically bigger monitor would be better is if you're watching movies or sitting far away, otherwise the picture will always be less sharp and there's nothing you can do to fix that besides sit farther away.
I've got a a 17" LCD at 1600 x 1024 and it's great for work and I have no problems with it being too small. I also have a 42" TV at 1920 x 1080 and it's great for entertainment (though I sit several feet away).
Please, I have been trying to use higher DPI settings (mostly for my parents) for over a decade. There is not a single OS on the market that can do it right, NONE!
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for the 180 bucks I paid at the time its good. I have very little back light bleed and the monitor is great for gaming. my only complaint is that I get some odd flickering on certain webpages. truthfully though in the year and a half that I have owned it I have only seen 3-4 pages do it and some other lcd monitors do it too.I totally agree with you. I have only used a 16:10 22" monitor and I am barely able to read the text when viewing a full page of a research article and I read 3-4 articles per day so zooming in to read texts is a hassle. Being a student, budget is THE determining factor and I have made up my mind to save some more money to get a bigger monitor even if it takes a few more days to make a purchase.
Toyota, how do you rate the monitor in your sig?
a 24inch 16:9 monitor is not very big at all. in fact my 23 feels pretty small and my 22 inch 16:10 monitor is even physically taller. go with the 24inch for sure.I'm glad I stumbled across this thread. I'm looking for a new monitor too and have been trying to decide between the ST2210 and the ST2410. They both have the same 16:9 resolution of 1900 x 1080 and the ST2210 is slightly cheaper.
My dilemma is whether the 24" display is going to be too big! Both monitors have the same resolution, so it makes sense that the only difference is the "bigness" of what's being displayed (a.k.a. the 24" model doesn't actually have anymore screen real estate, it just displays things bigger).
I'm going to be reading a lot and I'm wondering if the text on a 24" is going to be too big, or unclear. Anyone have an opinion on this?
um no the text isnt too large at all and in fact its still fairly small. you would have to but it at 800x600 or even 640x480 for people to think text was too big.So, you don't think text will be too large on a 24"? Does that mean that text would be too small on a 22"?
Pass up. 1680x1050 res is no good. 22 inches is sorta small for now adays.
I'm glad I stumbled across this thread. I'm looking for a new monitor too and have been trying to decide between the ST2210 and the ST2410. They both have the same 16:9 resolution of 1900 x 1080 and the ST2210 is slightly cheaper.
My dilemma is whether the 24" display is going to be too big! Both monitors have the same resolution, so it makes sense that the only difference is the "bigness" of what's being displayed (a.k.a. the 24" model doesn't actually have anymore screen real estate, it just displays things bigger).
I'm going to be reading a lot and I'm wondering if the text on a 24" is going to be too big, or unclear. Anyone have an opinion on this?
well you sit closer to a laptop so a desktop monitor at normal distance would be much different.That would be great!
I have a laptop (a Gateway P-6860FX) with a 17" screen. The actual dimensions of the screen are 15" x 9.35" and the resolution is 1440x900.
To each their own, but I will NEVER use a ~22" monitor at a greater than 1680x1050 resolution. Tried a 21.5" 1080p one once. Promptly returned it and got an ASUS VH242H (23.6" 1080P) instead.
I used to have a 15.4" Dell laptop at 1680x1050 (there was also a 1920x1200 upgrade). Now with a 20" 1600x900 display, everything feels huge, even with the viewing distance increased in desktop use. Same with my 720P 32" LCD TV. I wish it would be easier to find higher resolution small panels, but it looks like the trend is towards lower resolutions (e.g. 1280x800 is horrible enough on a 14.1" display, much less 1366x768 on a 15.6"; both should have a resolution with at least 900 vertical pixels).
I'm also not that sensitive to the scaling artifacts when running lower resolutions; YMMV I guess.
nobody mentioned scaling artifacts... we are all talking about text size.
