CNET monitor buying guide

By Justin Jaffe on 10 August 2007

Tags: guide | how to | monitor | crt | lcd | pixel | display | image

  1. Introduction
  2. Which LCD is right for me?
  3. LCD Basics
  4. Judging Image Quality
  5. Features and Connectivity Options
  6. Warranties
  7. Glossary

Which LCD is right for me?
With so many monitors to choose from, before you buy it pays to figure out what specs and features will be most important to you. These user profiles will start you off in the right direction.

Match your needs to one of these user profiles:
Home user | Business user | Student | Digital photographer/graphic artist | Gamer | Video editor/movie buff

Home user

Home users need to balance price and performance. Extra features such as speakers or USB ports are an important consideration, and depending on where the computer is located, aesthetics may matter as well.

KEY FEATURES:

  • Price
  • Good colour performance
  • Sharp text
  • Design/appearance
  • Video input

Business user

Businesses need some bang for the buck, but they are willing to pay for productivity. Bells and whistles are not as important as good image quality and adjustability for viewing comfortably at long stretches.

KEY FEATURES:

  • Large image area to display more information
  • Adjustability
  • Energy efficiency
  • Compact form factor
  • Reliability

Student

Academic life often means cramped quarters, with a budget to match. Students need a lightweight, portable design; a small footprint, and image quality good enough for both working and playing.

KEY FEATURES:

  • Low cost
  • Small form factor
  • Easy to move
  • Video input optional, but handy

Digital photographer/graphic artist

What you see onscreen is not what you get from your printer. People working with digital images need excellent colour fidelity and consistent results. These high-end LCDs offer near perfect colour scales and some provide colour calibration options and advanced adjustability.

KEY FEATURES:

  • Colour calibration
  • Excellent screen geometry
  • Large display area
  • High resolution

Gamer

It's all about speed for serious game players. Eye-popping image quality is essential, but a lightning-fast pixel response time is the key to keeping images sharp when the action starts.

KEY FEATURES:

  • Pixel response time
  • Colour accuracy
  • Large display area

Movie buffs

When video nuts edit the key close-up in their master work, they want total artistic control, and they need crisp, accurate images. Movie buffs watching at home will want the same.

KEY FEATURES:

  • Pixel response time
  • Colour accuracy
  • Large display area
  • Alternate signal inputs a plus

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?
27/03/2008 04:25 AM

my question was ......digetal vs. analogue computer monitor?

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