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Okay so I just bought 2 of this monitor: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16824009127
( $139 - $40 = $99 x 2 = $198 )
First, I recommend if anyone is looking for a monitor to buy this one while the 24 hour sale lasts. It is a 19" widescreen monitor with maximum resolution of 1680x1050.
Second, is it better to use 1 high-end graphics card with both monitors hooked to it or 2 medium-range cards.
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Yea that's a sick deal. I paid that much for one 21" monitor a few months ago.
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That's so ridiculous, my first LCD which I still use is a 20" Dell that I paid like $600 for a long ass time ago when widescreen was still really new. Can't believe you can get a 19" widescreen for 99$ now
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Kentor
United States5784 Posts
Sick res for size and price wowowow Way better than those 22" 1680s
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Yea, a few years back I paid about $400 for a 19" non-widescreen monitor, but the Samsung brand name alone probably accounted for half the cost.
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i knew it was an acer >.<
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On May 13 2009 08:00 Spartan wrote:Okay so I just bought 2 of this monitor: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16824009127( $139 - $40 = $99 x 2 = $198 ) First, I recommend if anyone is looking for a monitor to buy this one while the 24 hour sale lasts. It is a 19" widescreen monitor with maximum resolution of 1680x1050. Second, is it better to use 1 high-end graphics card with both monitors hooked to it or 2 medium-range cards. 1 Powerful card is usually preferred so you can upgrade to 2 cards later if you want a bit more gaming power or acquire more than 2 monitors.
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i just use my 37 Tv as the other monitor ;D
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I have an Acer laptop and monitor and I have no complaints so far. I recently bought an Acer 23" LCD monitor that is 5 MS full HD 1080P at 1920 x 1080 resolution and it looks amazing.
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On May 13 2009 08:29 xmShake wrote:Show nested quote +On May 13 2009 08:00 Spartan wrote:Okay so I just bought 2 of this monitor: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16824009127( $139 - $40 = $99 x 2 = $198 ) First, I recommend if anyone is looking for a monitor to buy this one while the 24 hour sale lasts. It is a 19" widescreen monitor with maximum resolution of 1680x1050. Second, is it better to use 1 high-end graphics card with both monitors hooked to it or 2 medium-range cards. 1 Powerful card is usually preferred so you can upgrade to 2 cards later if you want a bit more gaming power or acquire more than 2 monitors. True, but is the speed of one card per monitor significant?
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On May 13 2009 08:00 Spartan wrote:Okay so I just bought 2 of this monitor: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16824009127( $139 - $40 = $99 x 2 = $198 ) First, I recommend if anyone is looking for a monitor to buy this one while the 24 hour sale lasts. It is a 19" widescreen monitor with maximum resolution of 1680x1050. Second, is it better to use 1 high-end graphics card with both monitors hooked to it or 2 medium-range cards.
Im assuming you still want to play games that will run only on the one screen. Therefore 1 graphics card that is more powerful is far better
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On May 13 2009 08:07 floor exercise wrote: That's so ridiculous, my first LCD which I still use is a 20" Dell that I paid like $600 for a long ass time ago when widescreen was still really new. Can't believe you can get a 19" widescreen for 99$ now
Not to crap on the OP's setup, but his monitors use TN panels. The dell you used is I believe an IPS. They're still like, ~500 for 24. Which would be meaningless if TNs were premium panels, but they're not, IPS's are. Outside of a new panel used only in the Dell 2209WA , IPS is significantly more expensive.
More than anyone wanted to know? probably
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For those not as technology savvy as you, basically me, what do TN and IPS mean, but more importantly what are the differences (pros and cons)?
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Anyways sick deal bro. I bought one of my samsung 20 inch widescreen for $137 out the door on a black friday 3 years ago and haven't really seen much deals of a 19"+ come cheaper then $139.99. On the video cards I couldn't exactly tell you since I don't know what you'll be doing but I would go for one powerful card first then as time progresses I am sure you will come across a video card equal or better to your whatever card you do buy.
I catch it funny that my job uses the same acer widescreen monitors which aren't to bad.
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In terms of video cards (depending on your budget) it's good to get something a tier down from the top (like what would be currently a GTX 270 or a Radeon 4870) because that will run anything pretty much max settings on a 21" monitor, dunno about 2 19" simultaneously though... Anyway, this way you can get a decent deal and can always upgrade with another card.
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On May 13 2009 11:15 Spartan wrote: For those not as technology savvy as you, basically me, what do TN and IPS mean, but more importantly what are the differences (pros and cons)?
The biggest difference, I think, is viewing angles. IPS panels have 178 degree viewing angles, and TN are 160-170. It's a problem for things like watching movies from your bed, or if you have multiple people trying to watch a movie on the monitor. Also, color accuracy isn't as good.
The plus side is that they are ultra-cheap (it's still crazy getting dual monitor for $200), and also fast response times and no input lag. They're typically better gamer panels as a result (Some of the best panels have 20-30 ms of input lag, basically meaning that if you had the video connected to a traditional tube monitor side-by-side, the video would be that much behind.)
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Ah, that clears things up a lot. Thanks! Those 8 degrees on the IPS panel won't make much of a difference for me personally though.
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