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While CRT monitors provide better color clarity and depth, the fact that manufacturers rarely make them anymore makes CRTs an unwise choice. LCD monitors are the current standard with several options.
I'm fairly new to the forums, so perhaps I missed a thread that would explain this, but I'm wanting to buy a new monitor and I'm very confused as to what to buy. Everything is going LCD, but I ...
The era of the venerable CRT monitor is beginning to draw to a close. That's the opinion of analysts meeting this week at the SID2006 conference in San Francisco. SID2006 is organized by the ...
CRT monitors can still be great for modern gaming and even look and perform better than their modern LCD counterparts. They are big, bulky, and in some cases expensive, but the results are ...
The LCD is just one large “pixel” that changes between Red Green and Blue at 3x the standard refresh rate, allowing the CRT to draw each color channel in greyscale and then filtering it to the ...
Newer CRT monitors, such as those produced in the mid-90s and the 2000s, will look sharper, handle reflections better, and have less noticeable lines or gaps in the image they display.
A truly high-end, authentic CRT filter (in the form of a shader) releases, but only for high refresh OLED and LCD displays. tom's Hardware.
For the past 30 years, cathode-ray tube (CRT) technology has dominated the PC monitor market. With LCD prices falling and screen sizes growing, however, a major shift to LCD displays may be around ...
“Since we will be using all LCD displays in it, we wanted to make sure our main evaluation monitors were of the highest quality,” Peers said. “Our engineers have a very critical eye and the BVM-L230 ...
(However, most CRT units sold globally are not HD.) According to research firm DisplaySearch, slightly more than 21 million LCD HD/SD sets were sold in the first quarter of 2008, compared to 2.8 ...
As prices for LCD monitors continue to fall, and CRT manufacturers fail to explain the advantages of their products to end users, the shift to LCDs will continue, according to IDC.