It's......it's huge. (No that is not what she said.

)
Quick review now, as I haven't had anything to eat since, um, I don't know. Breakfast? It's been awhile.
No, it did not come with a DVI cable, only a scrappy little 15-pin thing.
It's nice. I ran a quick monitor testing program. I see no stuck or dead pixels.
The colors are nice, it's very bright, it looks lovely now at its native resolution (1680x1050). The color temperature looks a bit on the pink side (too cool), I'll see if I can change that in the LCD's menus.
Very sharp text, minimal ghosting (or whatever it is that Rubycon says it is really called

), and, and, it's big.
There is some white bleed at the top and bottom edges when it displays a black screen, but not a lot. The contrast is good, too.
Running a program in letterbox mode, such as a fullscreen video, results in a picture measuring 20.25" diagonal, so it's just about the same as having my 21" CRT.
And damn, widescreen movies look nice. The colors are quite well saturated, perhaps even too much so. But I haven't touched any of the controls yet.
Right now, it looks like a darn fine monitor. Thank you everyone for your suggestions.
It's also amazing how much this not-Monster Cable doesn't suck.:laugh:
Well, the first problem has arisen. SageTV stretches the image to fill the entire screen. Hopefully it's just a simple setting in SageTV that needs changing.
And indeed it was. I changed the aspect ratio to 16:10, and all's well.
More updates follow
I just checked out the menu, and adjusted the color temperature to something a bit more blue.
The menu is pretty sparse. There are 5 sections for settings, one of which is just for language and the position of the OSD. The 4 others have controls for:
- brightness, contrast and gamma
- color temperature with a master slider and one for each color
- horizontal and vertical positioning
- clock, phase, and sharpness
That's it, though I don't know that much else is needed.