Ahh, thanks for the clarification,
darkswordsman17. No screen door effect on this monitor, then (outside of about 2" viewing distance). I guess what I'm seeing is just the surface of the monitor. It's a very fine grain layer which everything sits behind. To tell the truth, I've stopped being aware of it while doing desktop work and even in movies.
Regarding the Vx2025's physical adjustments: It only tilts. No height, swivel or rotation.
The LCDs I've used on a regular basis (at work) are old no-name panels with a glass front, and they're okay for text; I can't run videos or games on them.
Unfortunately, all I carry at work is LG, Samsung, Sony & Viewsonic, so I haven't been able to view many high-end panels other than the Sony HS75PS and HS95PS (absolutely beautiful screens). I've never even seen a Dell or stand-alone Apple monitor, though.
After extensively studying the ones I have hooked up at work, today, I did notice that the "surface effect" I've mentioned is least noticeable to me on the Vx2025, compared to all the non-glossy panels I've seen. I ran DVDs and some game demos and can say that this one is quite good compared to the other current models I have available (LG 1930SQ, Samsung 713N & 940B & 970P, Viewsonic VA712B & Vx922 - The older panels we still carry are, to put it mildly, crappy). I'd never noticed it before because we keep them fairly high up (about a foot above eye level, so the viewing distance is greater) - I had to get up on a step-ladder to look at a photo on each of them, that I'd studied at home, earlier.
Doing further tests here at home (using a gradient in Photoshop) it looks like this is indeed an 8-bit panel. I don't see extra banding in the colours when looking at the gradient on the LCD as opposed to the CRT.
Knowing that this was a budget 20 incher going in ($560 CAD after taxes - $480 USD), I was expecting some deficiencies but I wanted to test it extensively to make sure. Like your roommate, I'd adjusted to the blurriness of my CRT so LCD is a bit of a shock to my system but I have over a week and a half left to get used to it. I've already acclimatized to the granular surface with regular desktop usage (I simply look past it, no more trying to focus
on it... I also moved the monitor further back on my desk and I don't notice it as much in brightly lit scenes in movies with movement as I did before (and can still read the text fine at this distance: 6 inches further back from where my CRT's screen sat).
All in all, I think it's a good monitor. Not great but good. It doesn't compare to the glossy Sony monitors that I've seen for their vivid colours but those are
really expensive here (The Apple screens integrated into the Macs are similarly impressive - I haven't seen the Apple Cinema displays but they are above what I wanted to spend, anyway). The backlight on this Vx2025 has some slight leakage that is noticeable in the corners on a black background but the colour is accurate to what I expect, after adjusting with software - Was too pale even after extensive monitor settings adjustment. Text is razor-sharp and there's no ghosting during gaming or fast-motion video... I'm definitely warming up to this budget monitor.
As an aside, my computer is my only source of video entertainment (having never had a TV larger than 20 inches and finally just canceling my cable years ago). I do watch a fair amount of DVDs on the computer, though, so I wanted something widethat included high resolution for desktop, with a good viewing angle (which the 2025 has). I knew I'd have to accept the loss of vertical pixels with the 20" widescreen aspect - I just miss them, like an old friend

The monitor looks great at sRGB setting for movies when sitting at my normal DVD viewing distance: ~five feet but I have to set a user mode for close up, as sRGB is just too bright.