CRT Monitor - What to Do
#1
Posted 28 February 2012 - 08:38 PM
#2
Posted 25 April 2012 - 06:54 AM
ASUS, Dell, HP and Samsung make some good monitors.
#3
Posted 25 April 2012 - 10:08 AM
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#4
Posted 25 April 2012 - 02:38 PM
Need a Windows ISO image?
#5
Posted 19 August 2012 - 12:41 AM
At a thrift shop near here, hundreds of old computers and CrT's were received as donations: the thrift shop owners just stored them outside, no roof even. I could kick myself for not going there to sort through their pile, before the rain hit. Whole thing was gone in maybe two-three months.
Some teenagers I know tell me that their games play better on the CrT's, than on flat panel. Something about speed and crispness of the graphics.
#6
Posted 19 August 2012 - 08:56 PM
Need a Windows ISO image?
#7
Posted 20 August 2012 - 04:27 PM
LiveBrianD, on 19 August 2012 - 08:56 PM, said:
Maybe, I don't know either. The ones I had were still working just fine after over 15 years, but I lost them in moving. The only one surviving is an old monochrome from 1985, needed for my 286 computer which can't support color. Again, I'm not trying to advocate them, but teenagers I know from Youtube drool over the old stuff, tell me CRTs are crisper, more fun for DOS games. I don't play computer games, so can't opine.
#8
Posted 20 August 2012 - 07:45 PM
Need a Windows ISO image?
#9
Posted 21 August 2012 - 04:48 AM
Actually people take it as a symbol of being technically challenged and even make fun of the ones who use them...
Few years ago someone called my old CRT a jurrasic creature...and laughed at it...obviously even complete technotards have a radiant flat panel TFT these days...
This post has been edited by Stevey: 21 August 2012 - 04:50 AM
Secondary machine(2004 model): ASUS mobo, pentium-2, 64mb ddr pc3200, 20Gig IDE hd.
#10
Posted 22 August 2012 - 11:44 AM
#11
Posted 22 August 2012 - 12:56 PM
#12
Posted 22 August 2012 - 02:22 PM
Need a Windows ISO image?
#13
Posted 22 August 2012 - 05:09 PM
LiveBrianD, on 22 August 2012 - 02:22 PM, said:
No, actually it doesn't. CRT's support a nearly infinite color range, even ips have limitations. You find them much quicker with the right sources. Add to it, CRT's have NATIVE contrast ratios of nearly 1,000,000:1. They can also produce a TRUE black. There are ZERO LCD panels of any type that can make either claim.
#14
Posted 22 August 2012 - 08:31 PM
They Keep on claiming LCD and other flat panels show live and natural colors unlike old tv sets, if CRT was so good the manufacturers should be aiming to deprive us of something so worthy?
This post has been edited by Stevey: 22 August 2012 - 08:36 PM
Secondary machine(2004 model): ASUS mobo, pentium-2, 64mb ddr pc3200, 20Gig IDE hd.
#15
Posted 23 August 2012 - 12:00 AM
Stevey, on 22 August 2012 - 08:31 PM, said:
They Keep on claiming LCD and other flat panels show live and natural colors unlike old tv sets, if CRT was so good the manufacturers should be aiming to deprive us of something so worthy?
Manufaturers usually shy away from color comparisons to CRT. They will try to go with other things that will make you forget about those arguments. Energy efficiency, size, weight, 3d, frequency, and so on. Everything that has little to do with actual image properties. Then, when forced to reveal the displays image quality, they modify the crap out of the testing to boost the numbers. ANY LED/LCD TV you see claiming more than 3,000:1 contrast ratio is flat out lying to you. I will give you a perfect example.
Here is the website for an LG IPS236V computer monitor. I am using a computer monitor because they are the only ones actually TESTED for contrast ratios in a calibrated, controlled environment.
Here are the calibrated results.
The difference?
LG claims that display has a 5,000,000:1 ratio. Toms Hardware proves it is actually closer to 202:1. That is quite a difference, no?
There are very, very few displays that can achieve more than 1,000:1. Even fewer than can display more than 16 million accurate colors or so. Most of those are attached to PC's. They are also very expensive. A 27" Dell monitor that can get you CLOSE, will run you $850. Understanding that CRT's have their own limitations, only that color range/quality isn't it on a tube of any decent quality.
This post has been edited by waldojim: 23 August 2012 - 12:02 AM
#16
Posted 23 August 2012 - 05:40 AM
That was a very nice info..thanks..
the sad thing is that they don't even sell unused crts these days..buy online or offline they always get us to dig into scraps and also they turned down the image of crts so much that they seem like dealing with something obsolete...yeah space and width are the problems but I remember getting such smooth FPS while gaming of them and also their capability to manipulate colors. I guess they can't use the FullHD(1080p) feature? ...they can't make a comeback anyways...!
This post has been edited by Stevey: 23 August 2012 - 05:50 AM
Secondary machine(2004 model): ASUS mobo, pentium-2, 64mb ddr pc3200, 20Gig IDE hd.
#17
Posted 25 August 2012 - 06:19 AM
Stevey, on 22 August 2012 - 08:31 PM, said:
They Keep on claiming LCD and other flat panels show live and natural colors unlike old tv sets, if CRT was so good the manufacturers should be aiming to deprive us of something so worthy?
Likely because most people care more about the things that LCD (and plasma) TVs do better, such as size and weight. A CRT larger than about 30" starts to run into practical problems with size and weight in particular. I had a 720p 30" CRT HDTV as my first HDTV. It was WAY heavier than my dad's new 46" LED HDTV. There is no way that I could carry my old 30" CRT HDTV, but I can carry my dad's 46" LED (its awkward due to the size).
Obviously, this becomes less of an issue when you talk about computer monitors as they are typically in the 20" range. But, still a my (last remaining) 19" CRT monitor (not in use) is WAY heavier than either of my 19" LCD monitors.
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