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viol
Maniac (V) Inmate

From: Charles River
Insane since: May 2002

posted posted 02-25-2004 19:01

I'm curious.

I was reading an article at dpreview.com and, at the bottom of it, the guy says that "DPReview calibrate (shouldn't it be calibrates?) their monitors ..., this means that on our monitors we can make out the difference between all of the ... grayscale blocks below. ... you should be able to see the difference ... between X,Y and Z and ideally A,B and C."

Here's the .gif file:



Tell me, what is the last block that you still can make out the difference from the previoius one?

In my case, since I like to adjust my monitor a little dark, to protect my eyes (I'm still using a CRT monitor), that would be block "V". I can increase brightness to be able to see all blocks differently, but I don't like the overall look of the image. Too bright.

krets
Paranoid (IV) Mad Scientist

From: KC, KS
Insane since: Nov 2002

posted posted 02-25-2004 19:05

I can differentiate all the blocks from each other on my work laptop. I'll check my home monitor when I get there.

:::11oh1:::

Veneficuz
Paranoid (IV) Inmate

From: A graveyard of dreams
Insane since: Mar 2001

posted posted 02-25-2004 19:06

I've got my monitor adjusted what I thought was a little bit darker than the 'standard', but I can see the difference between all of the blocks. The difference between A and B, and Y and Z are small and I doubt that I would have tought about it if I didn't know it was supposed to be there.

_________________________
"There are 10 kinds of people; those who know binary, those who don't and those who start counting at zero"
- the Golden Ratio -

JKMabry
Maniac (V) Inmate

From: out of a sleepy funk
Insane since: Aug 2000

posted posted 02-25-2004 19:07

A and B are very close but distinguishable here, XY and Z are very distinct on the flat panel, suprisingly much the same in my CRT, tho the CRT is a bit off in other ways for sure, darker overall I think.

poi
Paranoid (IV) Inmate

From: France
Insane since: Jun 2002

posted posted 02-25-2004 19:12

On my Samsung SyncMaster 192V, The difference between A and B and Y and Z are really subtle. At first sight they look the same but when I focus around them I can distinguish the 2 shades.

bitdamaged
Maniac (V) Mad Scientist

From: 100101010011 <-- right about here
Insane since: Mar 2000

posted posted 02-25-2004 19:51

On my POS here at work I can see the diff between A and B but XYZ are all pretty much the same.


Interestingly there is a difference between X and Z but Y blurs between the two.



.:[ Never resist a perfect moment ]:.

synax
Maniac (V) Inmate

From: Cell 666
Insane since: Mar 2002

posted posted 02-25-2004 19:52

They're all distinguishable for me on a CRT. Guess that means my monitor is properly calibrated Woohoo.

"Nothin' like a pro-stabbin' from a pro." -Weadah

Lacuna
Maniac (V) Inmate

From: the Asylum ghetto
Insane since: Oct 2002

posted posted 02-25-2004 19:54

A and B show a very subtle difference that i wouldn't have been able to distinguish if i hadn't been looking for them to be different, but Y and Z are easily distinguishable.
i have a 19" crt monitor (it's a beast).

viol
Maniac (V) Inmate

From: Charles River
Insane since: May 2002

posted posted 02-25-2004 19:58

I see that some of you have 19" monitors, probably LCD, probably set to 1280 x 1024 resolution. Unless your monitor is a widescreen model, it should be a regular fullscreen 4x3 model. But the resolution 1280 x 1024, common to such monitors as the native resolution, is not in the same proportion.

So my question is: when you have such a monitor, set to such a resolution, when you see a circle in the screen, does it look like a circle or like an oval format?



PS - I'm asking this question because I'm about to change my monitor and I don't want to have a monitor that shows an ellipse when it was supposed to show a circle.

Ramasax
Paranoid (IV) Inmate

From: PA, US
Insane since: Feb 2002

posted posted 02-25-2004 20:01

I can differentiate the difference perfectly on both my laptop LCD and external LCD.

poi
Paranoid (IV) Inmate

From: France
Insane since: Jun 2002

posted posted 02-25-2004 20:43

viol: Since I have an LCD monitor, I'm stuck to its physical resolution that is 1280x1024 ( 5:4 ) though I'd prefer 1280x960 ( for its 4:3 ratio ). Nonetheless I don't see your picture as an oval. It's not surprising since the difference of aspect ratio between 1280x1024 and 1280x960 is ~7% so with those high resolutions it's really hard to notice a difference without a 4:3 monitor as reference nearby.



[This message has been edited by poi (edited 02-25-2004).]

mas
Paranoid (IV) Inmate

From: the space between us
Insane since: Sep 2002

posted posted 02-25-2004 20:57

i have a LCD monitor, i have 1280*1024, and this circle looks like a circle

synax
Maniac (V) Inmate

From: Cell 666
Insane since: Mar 2002

posted posted 02-25-2004 21:03

The circle wouldn't appear as an oval because it's a fixed size 120 x 120 px. Regardless of what resolution you're using, it's always going to be a circle.

The reason why some things appear stretched (such as windows) in 1280x1024 is because they used percentages instead of a fixed size.

"Nothin' like a pro-stabbin' from a pro." -Weadah

Slime
Lunatic (VI) Mad Scientist

From: Massachusetts, USA
Insane since: Mar 2000

posted posted 02-25-2004 21:27

Viol: I was also worried about aspect ratio issues when I got my 1280x1024 monitor. The only place it has ever mattered is in games, but only in small ways.

That circle is a perfect circle because the monitor's physical aspect ratio matches its pixel aspect ratio.

The issue with getting a 1280x1024 LCD monitor is that you're stuck at that resolution no matter what you do. But so far, I haven't regretted getting it over the 1024x768 ones.

Yannah
Paranoid (IV) Inmate

From: In your Hard Drive; C:
Insane since: Dec 2002

posted posted 02-26-2004 02:09

Yes I can tell the difference, this monitor must be around 52bit, I dunno, they locked the properties.


[This message has been edited by Yannah (edited 02-26-2004).]

Cameron
Bipolar (III) Inmate

From: Brisbane
Insane since: Jan 2003

posted posted 02-26-2004 18:58

It's 3:55am and all I see is a big fat blur form white to black... oh... wait... nup. Still a big fat blur.

I think I need sleep, or glasses, or a new monitor (this pokey ol 15" from the late 90's is showing it's age). Eh, I'll sleep on it.

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