Because I have a 17" monitor and a 19" one, do they take different resolutions?
take the model number, google it, and you should find your answer pretty easily.
That.Parker wrote:
take the model number, google it, and you should find your answer pretty easily.
Otherways, standard (Non-widescreen) 17 and 19" LCDs usually run at 1280x1024.
And seeing what is the native resolution is easier than spotting the differance between a cow and a sheep, why no just test?
Wrong..Sup wrote:
native res. for a 17" is 1024x768, for a 19" its 1280x1024
Last edited by Freezer7Pro (2008-02-20 07:13:22)
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
When I hit settings it says native: 1280x1024 on my 17, but nothing on my 19..Sup wrote:
native res. for a 17" is 1024x768, for a 19" its 1280x1024
Watching skins on 4od so kinda can't right now.Freezer7Pro wrote:
why not just test?Parker wrote:
take the model number, google it, and you should find your answer pretty easily.
Last edited by Funky_Finny (2008-02-20 07:13:50)
I'm 100% sure that on a 19" the res. is 1280x1024. My 17" Iiyama had a native res. of 1024x768 (it couldn't go higher) but it was one of the first LCD monitors available in the market.Funky_Finny wrote:
When I hit settings it says native: 1280x1024 on my 17, but nothing on my 19..Sup wrote:
native res. for a 17" is 1024x768, for a 19" its 1280x1024Watching skins on 4od so kinda can't right now.Freezer7Pro wrote:
why not just test?Parker wrote:
take the model number, google it, and you should find your answer pretty easily.
Yeah, when I use the display settings the 17 inch only goes up to 1280x1024 and the 19 inch could only go up to 1600x1200. But that's too big, isn't it?.Sup wrote:
I'm 100% sure that on a 19" the res. is 1280x1024. My 17" Iiyama had a native res. of 1024x768 (it couldn't go higher) but it was one of the first LCD monitors available in the market.Funky_Finny wrote:
When I hit settings it says native: 1280x1024 on my 17, but nothing on my 19..Sup wrote:
native res. for a 17" is 1024x768, for a 19" its 1280x1024Watching skins on 4od so kinda can't right now.Freezer7Pro wrote:
why not just test?
I have a 17'', its at 1280 x 1024. My dad has a 19'', its also at 1280 x 1024..Sup wrote:
native res. for a 17" is 1024x768, for a 19" its 1280x1024
Any monitor can have any resolution. Geez, there's nothing specifying the exact resolution of an LCD monitor. My 17" is 1280x1024, my 14" is 1024x768, my 15" is 1024x768, the school's 19" are 1280x1024, my mate's 19" is 1440x900, my lappy's 15" is 1280x800.Funky_Finny wrote:
Yeah, when I use the display settings the 17 inch only goes up to 1280x1024 and the 19 inch could only go up to 1600x1200. But that's too big, isn't it?.Sup wrote:
I'm 100% sure that on a 19" the res. is 1280x1024. My 17" Iiyama had a native res. of 1024x768 (it couldn't go higher) but it was one of the first LCD monitors available in the market.Funky_Finny wrote:
When I hit settings it says native: 1280x1024 on my 17, but nothing on my 19..Sup wrote:
native res. for a 17" is 1024x768, for a 19" its 1280x1024
Watching skins on 4od so kinda can't right now.
Just google it, goddammit!
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
Yeah, 1600x1200 looks a bit duff. I'll stick with 1280x1024 on both.
I don't think a 19" can go that high. 1600x1200 is the native res. for 22" LCD's.Funky_Finny wrote:
Yeah, when I use the display settings the 17 inch only goes up to 1280x1024 and the 19 inch could only go up to 1600x1200. But that's too big, isn't it?.Sup wrote:
I'm 100% sure that on a 19" the res. is 1280x1024. My 17" Iiyama had a native res. of 1024x768 (it couldn't go higher) but it was one of the first LCD monitors available in the market.Funky_Finny wrote:
When I hit settings it says native: 1280x1024 on my 17, but nothing on my 19..Sup wrote:
native res. for a 17" is 1024x768, for a 19" its 1280x1024
Watching skins on 4od so kinda can't right now.
No, it isn't. IT BLOODY ISN'T! There are no exact resolution "rules" for s specified size!.Sup wrote:
I don't think a 19" can go that high. 1600x1200 is the native res. for 22" LCD's.Funky_Finny wrote:
Yeah, when I use the display settings the 17 inch only goes up to 1280x1024 and the 19 inch could only go up to 1600x1200. But that's too big, isn't it?.Sup wrote:
I'm 100% sure that on a 19" the res. is 1280x1024. My 17" Iiyama had a native res. of 1024x768 (it couldn't go higher) but it was one of the first LCD monitors available in the market.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
Well then 99% of 19" LCD's have that res. as a native one.Freezer7Pro wrote:
No, it isn't. IT BLOODY ISN'T! There are no exact resolution "rules" for s specified size!.Sup wrote:
I don't think a 19" can go that high. 1600x1200 is the native res. for 22" LCD's.Funky_Finny wrote:
Yeah, when I use the display settings the 17 inch only goes up to 1280x1024 and the 19 inch could only go up to 1600x1200. But that's too big, isn't it?
Not that either. A majority, yes, but that's in the 60-70% area. And it'd definitly not 1600x1200 for the majority of 22" ones. That's usually 1920x1080 or 1680x1050..Sup wrote:
Well then 99% of 19" LCD's have that res. as a native one.Freezer7Pro wrote:
No, it isn't. IT BLOODY ISN'T! There are no exact resolution "rules" for s specified size!.Sup wrote:
I don't think a 19" can go that high. 1600x1200 is the native res. for 22" LCD's.
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
Usually you'll find a 19" screen in 4:3 is 1280x1024, and a 16:10 is 1440x900. They're are the most common ones but it cna vary.
EDIT: why don't you just check yourself? wouldn't that be so much easier than making a topic here?
EDIT: why don't you just check yourself? wouldn't that be so much easier than making a topic here?
Not really lol.Shadow893 wrote:
Usually you'll find a 19" screen in 4:3 is 1280x1024, and a 16:10 is 1440x900. They're are the most common ones but it cna vary.
EDIT: why don't you just check yourself? wouldn't that be so much easier than making a topic here?
Newer made monitors, both 17" and 19" will be 1280x1024. Although it can change from model to model. This is assuming it is 4:3 (or in 1280x1040 case, 5:4) style and not widescreen (16:9/16:10)
That's the answer I was needing, I thought as much. Thankskylef wrote:
Newer made monitors, both 17" and 19" will be 1280x1024. Although it can change from model to model. This is assuming it is 4:3 (or in 1280x1040 case, 5:4) style and not widescreen (16:9/16:10)
actually 1280 x 1024 is a 5:4 ratio, 1280 x 960 is 4:3. For some reason lcd's use the 5:4 for this res bur 4:3 for others (such as 1024 x 768, 1600 x 1200)Shadow893 wrote:
Usually you'll find a 19" screen in 4:3 is 1280x1024, ?
Last edited by jaymz9350 (2008-02-20 11:27:29)
1024x768, that is.jaymz9350 wrote:
actually 1280 x 1024 is a 5:4 ratio, 1280 x 960 is 4:3. For some reason lcd's use the 5:4 for this res bur 4:3 for others (such as 1024 x 765, 1600 x 1200)Shadow893 wrote:
Usually you'll find a 19" screen in 4:3 is 1280x1024, ?
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
My 19" is 1440 x 900
Last edited by Peter (2008-02-20 11:15:46)
Yeah I'm surprised kylef got this one wrong tbh...jaymz9350 wrote:
actually 1280 x 1024 is a 5:4 ratio, 1280 x 960 is 4:3. For some reason lcd's use the 5:4 for this res bur 4:3 for others (such as 1024 x 765, 1600 x 1200)Shadow893 wrote:
Usually you'll find a 19" screen in 4:3 is 1280x1024, ?
4:3 = 1600x1200 1280x960 ; 1024x768 ; 800x600 ; 640x480 etc.kylef wrote:
Newer made monitors, both 17" and 19" will be 1280x1024. Although it can change from model to model. This is assuming it is 4:3 (or in 1280x1040 case, 5:4) style and not widescreen (16:9/16:10)
5:4 = 1280x1024
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_display_standard
main battle tank karthus medikopter 117 megamegapowershot gg
Those 17" and 19" LCD displays, manufactured for the last several years, in standard aspect ratio, are 1280x1024. However, that is for standard consumer displays. As freezer noted, there is no specific requirement for the native resolution of a panel of specific size, that is just what manufacturers have used because of cost and desired resolution of the average home/office consumer.
When I worked for NEC/Mitsubishi they had a line of medical monitors that were 20" displays, but had a resolution of 2048x1536, and only ran in grayscale, but did so with a 1024 shades of gray palette.
When I worked for NEC/Mitsubishi they had a line of medical monitors that were 20" displays, but had a resolution of 2048x1536, and only ran in grayscale, but did so with a 1024 shades of gray palette.