New Monitor Search
Jan. 6th, 2007 02:44 amIn an effort to improve my workspace and make it a more comfortable place in which to work, it would appear that I should get a nice flat LCD monitor. This would mean that I would have enough room to sit facing it straight on, instead of the scrunched, crooked setup I have now that is starting to twist my internal organs into knots.
Anyone recommend a particular brand? Anyone decry a particular brand as being an instrument of the devil? I'm looking to spend less than $200, which seems to give me plenty of options on Newegg.
Any thoughts on whether I'd be better off with widescreen or plain old rectangular? If I understand the bit about connection methods, my current monitor is D-sub, but how the heck can I tell if I can use one that connects via DVI-D? As I understand things I'm looking for a small number for response rate, large number for Constrast Ratio, wide angles for viewing angle, and high number for brightness, but are there any other fiddly numbers I should be watching carefully?
Anyone recommend a particular brand? Anyone decry a particular brand as being an instrument of the devil? I'm looking to spend less than $200, which seems to give me plenty of options on Newegg.
Any thoughts on whether I'd be better off with widescreen or plain old rectangular? If I understand the bit about connection methods, my current monitor is D-sub, but how the heck can I tell if I can use one that connects via DVI-D? As I understand things I'm looking for a small number for response rate, large number for Constrast Ratio, wide angles for viewing angle, and high number for brightness, but are there any other fiddly numbers I should be watching carefully?
no subject
Date: 2007-01-06 04:23 pm (UTC)This is typically what I do when I need a monitor or computer. I've never had any problem with a remanufactured item. I've had more problems with brand spanking new ones. I do have remufactured LCD monitor at the store, which is still looking great after at least 2 years.
The easiest way to find those is shop for the item you want, then go to the manufacturers website. They'll often have them for sale direct through their website. You'll have to pay shipping, but you'll probably still be able to get a larger monitor cheaper than you would at a place like Circuit City or Best Buy.