Wednesday, December 23rd 2009
BenQ Intros Two LED-Backlit HD Displays
BenQ will release two new full-HD LCD monitors to the market, the 21.5 inch G2222HDL and 24-inch G2420HDBL. The two are characterized by LED backlit illumination, and share nearly identical specifications which include glossy black frames, native resolution of 1920 x 1080 pixel TN panels, 5 ms response time, 1,000:1 contrast ratio with 5,000,000:1 dynamic contrast ratio, brightness of 250 cd/m², and connectivity which includes DVI and D-Sub. The G2222HDL and G2420HDBL are expected to be priced at £149 and £169, respectively, available from this week.
Source:
TechConnect Magazine
114 Comments on BenQ Intros Two LED-Backlit HD Displays
Now please include 120Hz and DisplayPort. Then I'll be able to stomach the TN and gladly buy a 24" one...
whiteblue LEDs = CRAP. But mindless consumers will buy them anyway.I propose we start using the term "HD+" to indicate 1200 res. That's like... woah... better than HD!!! The moron bean counters will wet themselves over it and want everything to be "HD+".
Well guys, actually the joke is on you. Just put 2 monitors next, one 22" with 1920x1200 and one with 24" with 1920x1080 then fire up a game. Now compare who has the more viewing space...
Besides... what kind of argument logic is that? How about comparing two 22" or two 24" monitors.
23.6" is 1920x1080
24" is 1920x1200 only.
you cant really get a screen with the same physical dimensions, and different aspect ratios
Basically, you have to up the size of a 1920x1080 monitor to get the same viewable area as a comparably sized 1920x1200 monitor. Hence you have to pit a 24" 1080 against a 22" 1200 to make it a fair "viewable area" argument... and in that argument the 1080 trumps itself by requiring larger screen dimension to compete.
as you look into the specs, you find out stores are misleading you on the size and they're smaller than their 16:10 counterparts
Yes, you're right... 24" monitors @ 1080 res are actually smaller than 24". However, 1200 res models are for the most part a full 24".
Are you or are you not saying that 1920x1080 is better than 1920x1200 at advertised dimension?
It was said "if a manufacturer offers a ~24" monitor at 1920x1200 and ~24" at 1920x1080... which one would you rather view? "
its 23.6 vs 24 - i was mostly intending to clarify that.
I was trying to explain that having a standard HD resolution offers you more viewing space on the left/right side of the screen. Just take 2 screenshots 1 at x1200 and 1 at x1080 and see the diference. ;)
And naturaly a 22" 1920x1080 monitor is smaller than a 22" 1920x1200. That's why I said a 22" and a 24" ... My bad.
1920x1080 :
1920x1200 :
So this is what I meant when said "extra viewing space"...
Yeah i tell people that all the time, that due to all the console ports this is standard behaviour - but i always get told i'm wrong
its horizontal minus, not vertical plus when they convert between the aspect ratios