I'm now onto my 3rd 24" tft monitor in ~2months (lol faulty) and im going to side with perna for the most part. TN vs IPS panels isnt largely important, considering how much more you are expected to pay for the IPS. The 24" i had prior to this was a BenQ v2400w and had a very accurate sRGB colour profile when calibrated.…
Two "medium" size displays > one big size display. It's not that expensive: two 22" 1680*1050 screens set you back like 130-150 euro's each here, that's still cheaper than one 24 or 26" screen.
I'm on a single 24" at home. I just alt+tab like a maniac. Before I moved, I had a 50" LCD on the wall for customers/watching movies/testing. But 90% of the time it was playing console videogames. Hardly used it for a secondary.
what about a 24-inch widescreen as the main monitor and a pivoted 19- or 21-inch one for email and random spillover? two fat widescreens seem just a bit ... wide ;) - particularly for a tablet user who wants to match the overall aspect ratio of their setup. i used two pivoted 21-inchers with regular aspect ratio for a…
I have two 22" widescreens at work and love it. Would have dual 24" if I could. At home I have a 22" widescreen and a 19" 5:4 aspect, it's not ideal but it's fine (19" for reference/browsing, widescreen for actual work). Again I'd prefer two matching displays (partly so that moving windows from one monitor to another isn't…
Yeah Per it works flawlessly with an aged videocard shoved in the PCI slot. 3 screens is a nice setup (used to have the baby cintiq as third... but sold it back), but even if it works it can get a bit annoying to handle. You'll end up adjusting settings for quite a while, trying to figure out what should go where, and so…
I think if you're considering LCD monitors, you should look into what sort of panels they come with. TN panels which come with most cheap lcds offer very poor viewing angles, to some people this isnt a problem, but others really cant stand it(if you shift in your chair an inch or so the color will change, and there tends…