Discussion Forums > Technology
Looking for new monitor, help please
Sosseres:
--- Quote from: bloody000 on October 02, 2011, 08:27:42 AM ---BTW normal colorimeters don't work correctly with wide-gamut monitors. You need a meter with replaced special filters or software corrected for the larger gamut or a spectrophotometer(cheapest one being ColorMunki which I bought).
--- End quote ---
I'll skip that. One of those calibrators cost ~1/3 of what a screen does.
No news is good news, means nobody found any serious faults with the screen. It is wide gamut which one person said was bad, it does come configured with a good sRGB configuration though, so I can use that if the default is annoying to me.
AnimeJanai:
A good thing you can do is take a look at the LED backlit monitors at Costco and Sam's Club in your area. I bought my Samsung monitor there for a great low price and you cannot really see the "gray" in the daytime. At night with a totally dark room, of course you can see some light, but as far as I know, all the monitors including the high-end ones are like that. LED backlight doesn't change over time like mercury lamps do. A mercury lamp monitor will have the white areas look quite white at the beginning, but a year later, it will probably be that usual less white (just as with laptops) if the monitor is on a lot. LED backlit monitors are amazingly lightweight and thin compared to the mercury lamp ones.
The Samsung website had a downloadable monitor calibration software and I used that to adjust the monitor level to appropriate accurate colours and contrasts. I suggest that you look at each brand makers' website to see if they have a downloadable calibration software to use with their monitor. I don't know if the Samsung one will run if you have a different brand of monitor connected. With all the anti-competitiveness going around with corporations, I wouldn't assume otherwise because there is no need for them to help any user that doesn't give them profit. My samsung monitor doesn't have a room sensor, so it doesn't automatically adjust the settings based upon room light. My expensive Sony does so it avoids the so-called "gray effect" at night as well as not being overly bright due to using daylight settings.
Shiny frames do not bother me. When you are looking at the bright video, the brightness causes your eye to not see the shinyness. Well, in my case I don't see the shine. And at night, you certainly cannot see the shine. Anyways, I watch the video, not the frame in any case.
Sosseres:
I tried a software calibrator out on my current Samsung screen. Only to find out I had no clue about what to aim for, meaning it was utterly pointless and I couldn't really see any difference after running it (probably related to me giving up quickly).
How thick/cumbersome it is isn't really relevant to me. The advantage of durability you mentioned with LED seems nice.
The problem is that limiting myself to LED and various IPS panels (decided to try this out instead of TN as time wore on) results in the following: http://www.prisjakt.nu/kategori.php?l=393#rparams=l=s76821099 where I can't really see myself buying any of those monitors. Though the HP ZR2440W (no reviews, yet, new since I last checked) and Dell UltraSharp U2412M (crystalized coating, which isn't important, yet I can skip it, so I will) looks kind of interesting.
azael113:
Wrong thread =x
kitamesume:
LED monitor gave me less headaches(pun) than the CCFL monitor =P
one noticable thing is that the LED monitor still is bright after 2years.
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