Lukeno94 wrote:Disagree on pretty much every count. Firstly, please show me the large number of 1280x800 displays; because I'm pretty sure there aren't that many.
All but a single widescreen I have seen are limited to this resolution. I've seen more 1024x600 ones though so maybe you're right.
1366x768, yes, but that is XGA given some more real estate, which is a good thing.
Rubbish. My CRT from 1999 (I bought it as a last-in-line in 2001) goes to 1600x1200. I want an upgrade, not a downgrade.
And on that front, the amount of vertical real estate is exactly the same. If that's not enough, just get a proper 1080p monitor, they're hardly expensive or rare.
No, but that's TV resolution. I'm trying to use a computer on it and don't like the idea of having to lose hundreds of pixels.
There are very few modern sites that have "large" borders at the side of any text area - and if there are any, then they will either also be present on an older display, or will be the result of lazy website design.
Sure, it's there on my full screen display, but is less pronounced. What am I supposed to do about lazy web design? I didn't design the website. I got the impression most were designed for tall narrow displays as used on tablet computers to be honest.
Still not the fault of the screen design. Point C is a ridiculous point; trying to argue they "look stupid" is just lame, and if your desk is so small that you can barely fit a widescreen monitor on it, I pity you; even my desk at home, which is far from massive, can fit a 19" TFT and a 21.5" LED IPS monitor on it... and I can think of several locations where a large 4:3 wouldn't have fitted, but a large 16:9 did.
Well bully for you for having a bigger house than me where you can afford a big desk and find a place to put it. I see this as a slight judgement of me and my home which was not necessary, you didn't need to agree with me but dragging it down to this level is unacceptable.
When was the last time you saw a 15-17 inch display capable of the resolution I want? They don't exist for the most part. The only one I found was from NEC a few years back and cost over $2000 so it was not happening, it had a response time of 35ms too so it would have been useless, I think there were passive displays faster than that. If you can find me a 15-17" display in 4:3 (or 5:4) aspect capable of 1600x1200 of higher with <3ms response time for less than £70 I'll get one, but you'll never do it. This was achievable 15 years ago. My desk is at it's limit with a 15" and a 17" display, I tried replacing the 15" with a spare LCD for a while when it wasn't working but it would not fit on the desk, the widescreen one was out of the question. I have nowhere to put a larger desk nor can I afford one. I am also having to move to a smaller house later in the year as the council have deemed this one unfit for human dwelling due to the steel frame rotting out.
And multi tasking is harder on a 16:9? Exactly what are you doing? It's easier to put two windows side by side on a 16:9 than it is on a 4:3!
Reasons explained above. Video editing is much more arduous on a 16:10 display and by the time I fit it all on, the resolution is so low I can hardly see any of the preview data or frame numbers, I also have to close several panels in Vegas. It also grates on me how I constantly have an area above and below the screen in focus because the visible area of the human eye does not match the 16:10 aspect ratio very well at all, when you focus on a single point your field of view is actually similar to a rounder triangle, the area most in focus at such close range is actually rather narrow. I end up getting headaches.
Still, if you like monitors that cannot even reach the same resolution as a low-cost one from 1997 be my guest.