My venerable 19" Sony Trinitron CRT monitor is on it's last legs, so I'm in need of LCD recommendations.
My needs are Surfing, light Photo stuff, some Movie watching and Gaming (but not too much fastpaced 3d Gaming).
I don't want a widescreen monitor, I don't want a TN panel and I don't want a glossy screen. I'm looking for something in the 19-21" range, preferably white.
So far, I've narrowed my choices down to the EIZO FlexScan S2000 and the Samsung 971P.
The EIZO is 20.1" @ 1600x1200 (and costs about $1100 here), the Samsung is 19" @ 1280x1024 (can be had for about $600 here). I'm currently running my 19" CRT @ 1280x960.
Optimally, I would get a panel with a 4:3 ratio, as I replay old games just as much as I play new ones - which often are at a locked 4:3 ratio (like StarCraft, Diablo, Fallout, Baldurs Gate, Heroes of might & Magic II, etc.).
But I'm afraid that 1600x1200 may be too demanding on my rig in newer 3d games. Even though I have a pretty good config at present (2.4 GHz Core 2 Duo, 2 gigs RAM and a 8800GTS w/ 640 Mb RAM), I prefer to play games at a lower res so I can max out all the eye candy and maybe add some AA and AF. And I'm not planning on upgrading for a couple of years.
Questions for those with 19" 1280x1024 displays:
1: Does the 0.294 mm dotpitch make text too coarse?
2: How bad is it when a 4:3 game is resized to the 5:4 screen? (Or do you play with the 4:3 ratio and black bars on the screen?)
Questions for those with 1600x1200 displays:
3: Do you feel it's a big deal to get the sharpness of the 0.255 mm dotpitch, as well as the added extra viewable area of the higher res?
4: How much trouble are you having in trying to keep up with newer games, when trying to run them at the screen's native res?
General questions:
5: I know that xtknight in his brilliant 'LCD Thread' states that the Samsung 971P is 'NOT suitable for any multimedia or motion video editing because of poor response time control.', but given my stated uses above, will it be a poor choice? (It did get some pretty good reviews here and (more seriously) here (in Danish).
6: Does anyone think that the higher price of the EIZO can be justified? (For my uses.)
7: Would there be any reason to wait for the refresh of the Samsung 971P - the 971P+?
Thanks for any and all advice
My needs are Surfing, light Photo stuff, some Movie watching and Gaming (but not too much fastpaced 3d Gaming).
I don't want a widescreen monitor, I don't want a TN panel and I don't want a glossy screen. I'm looking for something in the 19-21" range, preferably white.
So far, I've narrowed my choices down to the EIZO FlexScan S2000 and the Samsung 971P.
The EIZO is 20.1" @ 1600x1200 (and costs about $1100 here), the Samsung is 19" @ 1280x1024 (can be had for about $600 here). I'm currently running my 19" CRT @ 1280x960.
Optimally, I would get a panel with a 4:3 ratio, as I replay old games just as much as I play new ones - which often are at a locked 4:3 ratio (like StarCraft, Diablo, Fallout, Baldurs Gate, Heroes of might & Magic II, etc.).
But I'm afraid that 1600x1200 may be too demanding on my rig in newer 3d games. Even though I have a pretty good config at present (2.4 GHz Core 2 Duo, 2 gigs RAM and a 8800GTS w/ 640 Mb RAM), I prefer to play games at a lower res so I can max out all the eye candy and maybe add some AA and AF. And I'm not planning on upgrading for a couple of years.
Questions for those with 19" 1280x1024 displays:
1: Does the 0.294 mm dotpitch make text too coarse?
2: How bad is it when a 4:3 game is resized to the 5:4 screen? (Or do you play with the 4:3 ratio and black bars on the screen?)
Questions for those with 1600x1200 displays:
3: Do you feel it's a big deal to get the sharpness of the 0.255 mm dotpitch, as well as the added extra viewable area of the higher res?
4: How much trouble are you having in trying to keep up with newer games, when trying to run them at the screen's native res?
General questions:
5: I know that xtknight in his brilliant 'LCD Thread' states that the Samsung 971P is 'NOT suitable for any multimedia or motion video editing because of poor response time control.', but given my stated uses above, will it be a poor choice? (It did get some pretty good reviews here and (more seriously) here (in Danish).
6: Does anyone think that the higher price of the EIZO can be justified? (For my uses.)
7: Would there be any reason to wait for the refresh of the Samsung 971P - the 971P+?
Thanks for any and all advice