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We still have a CRT TV at home [Hungariaorszag] but that will probably go soon.
Panic, Chaos, Destruction. My work here is done.
Drink. Get drunk. Fall over - P O'H
OK, I will win to day or my name isn't Ethel Crudacre! - DD Ethel Crudacre
I cannot live by bread alone. Bacon and ketchup are needed as well. - Trollslayer
Have a bit more patience with newbies. Of course some of them act dumb - they're often *students*, for heaven's sake - Terry Pratchett
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I replaced my 32" CRT TV at xmas with a 42" flatty.
I now realise how small my old TV was in comparison.
My next door neighbour nabbed my old one.
I also realise that getting a 42" TV was a mistake.
There are 60" ones available!
(My wife would have a conniptic fit if I brought home a 60", she thinks the 42" is a little too big for our front room).
---------------------------------
I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave
CCC Link[ ^]
English League Tables - Live
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You want to be careful about that. I heard a beautiful definition of working class vs. middle class.
Working class - has a TV that's too big for their house
Middle class - have a big enough house to fit said TV in
I doubt it. If it isn't intuitive then we need to fix it. - Chris Maunder
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The B&W feature would be awesome.
Chris Meech
I am Canadian. [heard in a local bar]
In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. [Yogi Berra]
posting about Crystal Reports here is like discussing gay marriage on a catholic church’s website.[Nishant Sivakumar]
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Dalek Dave wrote: final, exasperated, pop and the emission of a tiny puff of smoke.
Well, yours is for sure.
As you know it's a matter of supply and demand. Flat panels look nicer are easier to move and the prices are now reasonable. They will build CRTs as replacement for certain installtions for some time but the costs will go up to purchase them.
It was broke, so I fixed it.
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My father sticks to his two 19" CRTs. Some time ago one of them got broken and he found out that no one wants to repair it.
So, he bought "new" one for a half of price of decent 19" LCD.
Any ideas for convincing him to switch to LCDs? 
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Show him a 26" one and show the power consumption figures!
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I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave
CCC Link[ ^]
English League Tables - Live
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I still have all CRT TV's in my home, but the computer monitor is LCD. I have an old CRT monitor down in the basement that I keep as an emergency reserve monitor.
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I haven't seen any for a while now, but I believe they are used, especially where colour representation is important.
I might be out of date, but the last I heard, CRT gives superior colour rendition than LCD or OLED.
So photographers, animators, film and video production etc may have a niche market for them.
I Dream of Absolute Zero
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RChin wrote: I might be out of date, but the last I heard, CRT gives superior colour rendition than LCD or OLED.
You are absolutely correct there. The newer technologies are digital and are therefore limited to discreet color levels, whereas a CRT is analog and has more or less has a continuos color range. e.g. integers vs real numbers in terms of color rendition. This shows up most noticeably in dark gradients.
A good CRT also has much faster refresh rates, so for applications where you need much faster than 30-60 fps, a CRT is the way to go.
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I use an old Trinitron CRT (picked up for $5 at Goodwill) for photo editing. Never could get reliable color or tonal rendition out of any LCD I own; an expensive IPS type one might fix that problem but expensive isn't an option right now. I also found that the slightly fuzzy pixels cause the CRT to render much more like the final print that an LCD does without causing me eyestrain.
Our TVs are all CRT, just because they still work. We're not into TV or movies seriously enough to justify replacing them "just because", in fact we only really use one of them on any sort of regular basis so the other two are likely to stay as CRTs for a very long time.
But for programming or anything else involving text, it's LCD all the way. Much easier on the eyes for those tasks.
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I'm still on a CRT telly with a digibox but that is because I am too mean/poor to replace it till it breaks.
I still have a 14"er tucked under the desk for emergency use even though I also have a spare 15" flat panel.
Henry Minute
Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?"
“I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.”
I wouldn't let CG touch my Abacus!
When you're wrestling a gorilla, you don't stop when you're tired, you stop when the gorilla is.
Cogito ergo thumb - Sucking my thumb helps me to think.
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I have a Viewsonic 19 inch at home. It still plays games better than any LCD you can buy (some cut scenes look better on my son's new laptop, but the action scenes still aren't as lovely and sometimes have an ever so faint ghosting and tearing.)
The same model Viewsonic is sitting the corner of my ex-wife's living room since she just got a new laptop after the hard drive died in her ancient piece-of-crap HP desktop. Another one is sitting in my closet--it mostly works, but if the output voltage of the graphics card isn't high enough during boot, it will drop back into sleep mode.
The only thing I really miss when I get home is the width of the screen and then I only really notice it when programming.
I still with my last company let me buy a pair of 21 inch IPS Dell LCDs that I was using. They replaced them with new 22 inch LCDs, but I missed the color accuracy and richness of the IPS screens and switched them back. Speaking of which, has anyone used the Dell UltraSharp U2312HM; it's supposed to be an IPS monitor, but in the past Dell hasn't been entirely truthful about this. And if you have used this, do you get any ghosting in games?
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Shhhh, don't mention VCR's. Got two broken ones in my lounge going to the recycler and I'm seriously considering throwing the other one with them. Nothing wrong with it, just haven't used it in 5 years. 
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I still use a 21" CRT on a home system. Although it is mostly used for playing music, so the quality of the monitor is pretty unimportant. As well, I still have a 36" CRT TV that weighs close to 75 pounds and this is still used quite a bit. The last time I moved it, it took me and a buddy to carry it outside the house and down the hill to my backyard and into the basement. It was safer than trying to carry it down the stairs!
Chris Meech
I am Canadian. [heard in a local bar]
In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. [Yogi Berra]
posting about Crystal Reports here is like discussing gay marriage on a catholic church’s website.[Nishant Sivakumar]
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When I bought my first house my future brother-in-law came to help me shift some stuff out of my mum and dad's house.
After much nagging from my mum I dusted and polished everything before moving it.
Carrying my freshly polished, widescreen CRT TV down the stairs was a perilous exercise.
Every man can tell how many goats or sheep he possesses, but not how many friends.
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There may be some applications left where a CRT may still give a more accurate representation of the colors over a wider spectrum, but those will also disappear in time. Otherwise CRTs are by now only good for museum exhibits.
Except for my monitor for my first computer of course. It's now almost 35 years old and still works as good as it used to
At least artificial intelligence already is superior to natural stupidity
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I have a 26" viewsonic CRT I keep around mostly for posterity. Another reason it sticks around is I don't have any men about to lift it!
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No, certainly not!
Magazine graphics artists still buy Sony Trinitron glass VDUs, as for the accurate colour gamut that lcds cannot even get anywhere near to close to covering.
Thermionic technology lives, at lease in high-quality publishing houses, and photography studios.
I still have a 21" HP (Trinitron based) VDU coupled with an expensive LCD (side-by-side) and the difference is astonishing. Even more so when one compares the final glossy printed page against the two.
The CRT can accurately show all of the colours.
The LCD is pale, lame, and way off by comparison.
A niche market, but an important one.
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Yayy! some one agrees with me! The reason for the LCD, TFT (non CRT!) looking flat and lame is that there is a lack of colourimetry (or Colorimetry) done for non CRTs. The problem is each panel varies a little in tolerance where as the bulky old CRT this could be compensated with in the design with non CRT it can't. Also the life of the average non-CRT is around a quarter as the florescent tubes burn out much quicker!
Glenn![Java | [Coffee]](https://codeproject.global.ssl.fastly.net/script/Forums/Images/coffee.gif)
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That's not true. You can buy colorimters for $100-200 and use the results to make corrections at the OS level before outputting the video. NEC's higher end models can use the same data to reprogram internal lookup tables to improve on OS level corrections; they're preprogrammed at the factory to adjust for variations from one part of the panel to the other. IIRC NEC's licensed their onboard correction tech to at least one 3rd party for a 30" model.
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, waging all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius
Training a telescope on one’s own belly button will only reveal lint. You like that? You go right on staring at it. I prefer looking at galaxies.
-- Sarah Hoyt
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I did not know that, I jumped ship from the Video side back to the RF side about 5 years ago. They were worried that every few weeks the LG & Samsung were changing specs about once a week. I was suffering from Data Sheet poisoning! Mind you that firm were so short armed and deep pocketed I can't seem to think they would pay $1.00 - 2.00 (at one stage they were buying up units that stripped HDMI's Key encryption off signals so they didn't have to pay the licence fee (not to much I always though))
Glenn
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Indeed. You can (and should) color correct an LCD (and should do the same for a CRT anyway) at the OS level if accurate reproduction matters to you. But that's only part of the puzzle.
Many LCDs I've encountered are extremely sensitive to viewing position. My laptop has a very obvious gradient from top to bottom at normal viewing distance which shifts dramatically on the smallest movement of your head relative to the screen. It's completely useless for anything where color and tone are even a little bit important. My older LCD monitor has a less-pronounced version of the same problem. The newer displays I have at work are a lot better in this respect but still aren't quite there. These are relatively cheap displays though, the higher end LCDs I'd expect to be much better.
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