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7 votes
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With monitors, which panel is ideal for movies and TV?
I'm looking for a ~24" 1080p monitor -- nothing flashy, purely for TV and movies. Right now I have a crappy Dell TN. I don't mind it, but the viewing angles aren't great. I just started looking...
I'm looking for a ~24" 1080p monitor -- nothing flashy, purely for TV and movies.
Right now I have a crappy Dell TN. I don't mind it, but the viewing angles aren't great.
I just started looking tonight. A lot of posts are saying that VA is ideal, IPS has light leaks, and TN has the typical viewing angle issues.
The main things I am concerned about are:
- I'm close to this monitor (VESA mounted where you'd have a second monitor)
- Color reproduction is important -- same with decent contrast
- I often watch stuff in a dark room
I don't really care about specific models (regional availability), but I'm hoping to find out which panel is ideal. Does anybody have any experience with a VA panel?
7 votes -
Questions about graphics card failures
TL;DR: How long should a graphics card last? What can I do to make them last longer? This is perhaps an odd question to ask, but I've been a console gamer for most of my life and have only been...
TL;DR: How long should a graphics card last? What can I do to make them last longer?
This is perhaps an odd question to ask, but I've been a console gamer for most of my life and have only been all-in on PC gaming for maybe 1-2 years and I think I may be missing something.
So there has been about three times when I have spent money on a half-decent graphics card, and each time they have failed me. The first one was a genuine hardware failure, probably a memory failure judging from the artifacting. The second one failed for reasons I have been unable to figure out. It didn't appear to be overheating, but I was getting driver errors that suggested it were; reinstalling from scratch did nothing to fix it.
The last, most current one is the one that bugs me the most. I'm getting the same problems; driver crashes just like overheating, except this one has better temperature monitoring and I can see that isn't happening.
I previously thought that the reason why my graphics cards would always crap out on me was because those were cheaper cards from less reputable manufacturers, but this last one is really bugging me because it's relatively high end and from a reputable manufacturer - it's a Gigabyte Radeon RX 5700, complete with the giant AMD reference cooler. I'm getting it RMAed, but since I didn't keep the receipt I am still going to have to pay to fix it even though it should theoretically be under warranty.
I've done a ton of searching to find out how I can possibly solve this myself, but I am frankly astounded by how little information the drivers give out on Windows. I'm seeing that the device is being reported as unavailable but nothing whatsoever as to why.
To make matters worse, it seems like this isn't actually common for other people. Most people seem to be replacing their graphics card because they are obsolete, not because they physically fail.
So basically what I am asking is, how long is a graphics card actually supposed to last for? Do I just have astonishingly bad luck?
10 votes -
It's called artificial intelligence—but what *is* intelligence?
4 votes -
Do antiviruses still slow your computer down?
9 votes -
US unemployment checks are being held up by a coding language almost nobody knows
21 votes -
Why doctors hate their computers
23 votes -
Official Raspberry Pi 4 Desktop Kit - Is it worth the price?
6 votes -
Raspberry Pi 4 CRT-based VR Headset
15 votes -
CES 2020 summary: Pork, driverless cars, new wearable sensors, folding computers, integrated tech
4 votes -
1996 talk by Cliff Stoll about the future of computers and the internet
9 votes -
Vintage Computer Festival Pacific Northwest 2020 looking for exhibitors, speakers, and volunteers
7 votes -
The Original IBM PC 5150 - The story of the world's most influential computer
4 votes -
What keyboard shortcut was a game changer for you?
...or just a useful lesser know keyboard shortcut.
35 votes -
How to build a desktop computer (tower) for Linux with pieces that are easily available worldwide (most especially South-America)?
This post is related and in some part a repetition of my other topic on how to buy a laptop for Linux. Because I'm in Brazil, many brands and stores that do not ship to my country are out of the...
This post is related and in some part a repetition of my other topic on how to buy a laptop for Linux.
Because I'm in Brazil, many brands and stores that do not ship to my country are out of the question, and even the ones that ship usually cost more than I can pay due to currency exchange rate and shipping costs themselves. What are some universal stores, brands and models that I can probably find on my location, that won't give me much trouble running Linux?
I don't require playing games or top performance (8GB RAM and i5 processor would be the minimum requirements). And SSD would be nice, but, for my budget, it's a plus.
I just need something that is durable and works reliably under Linux, especially when it comes to audio and HDMI output, video graphics adapter support, booting from USB, hibernating, sleeping and power management.
Thanks!
6 votes -
Raspberry Pi 4 on sale now from $35 | USB3, Gigabit Ethernet, 1.5GHz Quad Core, Upto 4GB RAM
54 votes -
The experience of working on a thirty-year-old Macintosh SE
6 votes -
Remote code execution on most Dell computers
6 votes -
Meet your iPhone’s grandparent
6 votes -
Light themes or Dark themes?
Traditionally I've used dark themes for everything I could on all of my devices, as I found it easier on the eyes when I'd usually use my computer (evening - night). Recently, I made the switch...
Traditionally I've used dark themes for everything I could on all of my devices, as I found it easier on the eyes when I'd usually use my computer (evening - night). Recently, I made the switch back to light stuff as I've been using my computer more for notes and assignments I'd normally hand-write, and I find I get drowsy less and have an easier time using the computer in a bright room than before - I just switched my theme on a whim one morning, so I wasn't expecting that at all!
So now I'm rethinking all my previous bias about dark themes being 'better' regardless of the situation, and I'm curious if anyone here had any thoughts and/or could point me to some reading on the subject (the subject being the effects of light/dark colours in work or concentration). It's something I realize now might be fairly important, as I'm looking at my screen for most of the day, but never really gave much thought before outside of tracking down the 'Dark' theme switch.
34 votes -
Office Depot and tech support firm Support.com will pay $35 million to settle FTC allegations that they tricked consumers into buying costly computer repair services
7 votes -
Hackers hijacked ASUS software updates to install backdoors on thousands of computers
10 votes -
Apple computers used to be built in the US. It was a mess
11 votes -
The cover of MAD magazine #258 from October 1985 announces a special computer section featuring the MAD Computer Program
7 votes -
Navy training video - Mechanical computers [1953]
6 votes -
Japan cybersecurity minister admits he has never used a computer
25 votes -
How the humble pocket calculator morphed into the smartphone
10 votes -
How the shared family computer protected us from our worst selves
11 votes -
How computers parse the ambiguity of everyday language
8 votes -
A program from a thirty-five year old magazine for “BASIC Month” and a chat with its author
4 votes -
Favorite Laptop?
What kind of laptop does everyone here have? If you had to replace it today, what would you replace it with?
24 votes -
Nvidia’s mini supercomputer is the fastest single computer humanity has built
4 votes