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Untitled Document
Resolution Scaling
Perhaps the most important issue facing a gamer in the market for an LCD screen,
is that of scaling. LCD's are built to display one resolution pixel-perfect,
and every other resolution must be either shown in a small section of the screen,
or scaled up to fit the screen. It is mathematically impossible for this scaling
to be perfect, or even close to it. This means if your graphics card isn't quite
up to the task, you cannot just lower the resolution without losing a lot of
visual quality. To get the most out of 19" or larger display with the latest
games, you will need a high end graphics card.
Some resolutions scale better than others, for example 800 x 600 looks fine
on a 1600 x 1200 screen, as it is exactly half the size. This means it is not
absolutely essential to have a fast graphics card to go with your big LCD if
you are only a casual gamer, but if you take your fragging seriously, you must
have a card to match the screen.
DVI - just another three letter acronym?
DVI, or digital video input as it stands for, has been around for a good many
years now, but displays supporting it have been thin on the ground. Modern TFT
monitors are entirely digital, so it doesn't make sense to convert a digital
signal at the computer into analogue in the graphics card, and then back to
digital in the monitor.
With a DVI connection, the data is transmitted in a lossless digital form.
This means the image can be replicated on screen with pixel perfection, exactly
the way the computer intended. There is also no signal degradation, so problems
such as moiré patterns and colour bleeding should be entirely eliminated.
From a technical standpoint, the little blue D-SUB connector we have known
and loved for over 20 years is obsolete and should have gone the way of the
floppy disk long ago. Of course, something being technically better isn't enough
to sway the mass market. When you use the supplied VGA cable with an LCD monitor,
it can lock onto the analogue signal and will flawlessly convert the analogue
signal back to digital, with no data corruption at all. Using a blind test,
we could not tell the two apart.
With this in mind, DVI remains expensive and optional. Most graphics cards
now have at least one DVI output, but many LCD monitors do not include a DVI
input. Some displays have a DVI socket but expect you to buy the cable separately.
DVI support is only found on the most expensive professional CRT monitors, which
has helped prevent DVI replacing VGA as the industry standard.
Because of the expense and lack of tangible benefits, DVI should not be much
of a priority for LCD buyers.
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