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Whether you are traveling or watching your favorite show, a small LCD monitor for your laptop keeps you organized and productive. Portable monitors for laptops give you a second screen for checking email, watching a movie, or surfing the web for information. Find the portable LCD screen that fits your needs in the extensive catalog on eBay, which offers a wide selection of new and secondhand monitors at reasonable prices.How does a portable LCD screen connect to a laptop?
You have two options for connecting a portable LCD monitor to your laptop - USB and HDMI. The primary difference between these two connection options is that HDMI is designed to provide you with high-quality audio and video. If you want a portable LCD screen for HDMI capabilities, look for one that has built-in speakers. When the portable LCD screen is connected to the computer, it is automatically detected and installed by the operating system.How portable are these LCD monitors?
The technology behind a portable LCD monitor allows for the devices to be lightweight and easy to carry. Standard sizes range from 7 to 16 inches, and the weight is typically less than two pounds. This means that your portable LCD screen can fit into the same case as your laptop without adding a significant amount of weight. Some portable LCD monitors come with cases to protect the device, making them easy to fit into a backpack or tote bag next to your tablet without worrying about damaging the device.What are some features of a portable LCD monitor?
When searching for your portable LCD monitor on eBay, you have a variety of options. You can find a full HD widescreen portable monitor with HDMI input and blue light filter for watching movies, a portable LCD screen with LED backlighting and touchscreen for your business tasks, and even a portable LCD that is designed specifically for gaming. You may want to choose a portable LCD monitor that comes with a case that can be used as a stand for the monitor to keep your work area neat and organized.Does a portable LCD monitor have connections for other devices?
The eBay catalog of portable LCD monitors includes models that connect to gaming systems, desktops, tablets, and laptops. You can also use headphones with the portable LCD screen, plug in a projector for a business presentation, and watch your favorite television program.
(IDG) -- Everybody loves the look: a large, skinny screen that occupies only a sliver of your desktop or hangs like a picture on the wall. And whether you typically work on page layouts, juggle multiple windows, play games, or watch DVD movies, you"ll find that a large screen makes most work easier and most play more fun.
But while 15-inch LCDs have become more affordable in the last year or two, very large flat-screen displays--whether for a desktop, a boardroom, a reception area, or a state-of-the-art home theater--have continued to command astronomically high prices that leave them out of reach for all but businesses with specialized needs, or the super rich.
LCD monitors won"t compete in price with their CRT counterparts anytime soon. But the same price drops that have already brought many 15-inch displays under the $1000 mark are beginning to make larger LCDs more affordable--less than $1500 in the case of two 17-inchers we review here.
There"s good news about the really big screens used for so-called digital signage (such as gate information at airports), presentations in large boardrooms, and dramatic-looking wall TVs, too. Once priced at $20,000 and up, more and more superlarge, 40-inch-plus plasma displays are dipping below the $10,000 mark. No, they won"t replace standard TVs--or rear-projection systems--in the near future, but upscale consumers who love home theater are already taking them seriously. According to industry observers, plasma"s audience should broaden by 2005, when prices could sink to $4000 or less.
By then, we will probably have new display choices that solve problems today"s offerings don"t even address. Technologies such as organic light-emitting diodes promise to unite energy savings and a CRT-quality display in a superthin--possibly even flexible--panel. Meanwhile, advances in ultra-high-resolution screens and microdisplays may offer eye-soothing performance and render extremely clear text in a way that today"s monitors can"t even approximate.
So who needs to go larger? Anyone who"s ever tried to write a report in a word processor while doing research in a browser, running a spreadsheet, and keeping an eye on e-mail will appreciate a roomier screen. We looked at four of the latest large LCD models from Eizo, NEC-Mitsubishi, and Samsung, all offering terrific-looking displays and good value. Text looks so sharp and crisp that most people will feel no eyestrain at these models" 1280 by 1024 native resolution--although 17-inch LCDs benefit from a larger font size.
The chief strength of NEC-Mitsubishi"s MultiSync LCD1700M ($1499) is its exceptionally wide viewing angle--160 degrees horizontally and vertically--coupled with decent built-in speakers. Samsung"s new $1199 SyncMaster 170T has both an analog interface and a newer DVI digital interface; the latter will become useful as more graphics adapters that support digital video output (which offers superior quality for LCDs) appear. Both of the units carry 17-inch screens.
Once the screen sizes exceed 17 inches, prices rise steeply: Some 17-inch monitors are half the price of their 18-inch counterparts. (Blame lower yields for 18-inch screens for this disproportionate price differential.) For example, Eizo"s 18-inch FlexScan L675 screen costs $2900--which is still an improvement over the $3000-plus prices 18-inch LCDs used to command. In the Eizo"s case, you"re also paying for such high-end features as an ultrathin bezel and a screen that can be rotated for landscape or portrait-style viewing.
Even some of the largest screens cost less than they used to. We were impressed by NEC-Mitsubishi"s 20-inch MultiSync LCD2010X, which goes for $3899--not cheap, but far better than the $8000-plus price tags on comparable-size displays of the last few years. And the LCD2010X can handle both analog and DVI digital hookups.
There"s no getting around it: Plasma displays have an undeniable wow factor. Match a high-resolution, 50-inch plasma display with a DVD like Toy Story 2, and suddenly you"re in home entertainment heaven. The on-screen colors are pure, the detail is breathtaking, and the visual impact is jaw-droppingly spectacular.
But plasma screens aren"t just for fun. Scott Evans, product manager for the NEC-Mitsubishi plasma monitor line, estimates that only about 20 percent of the 50,000 to 60,000 plasma displays sold last year went into the homes of the wealthy. Most are used for public displays and corporate multimedia presentations in such high-traffic places as airports, corporate office lobbies, and trade show exhibits.
Plasma is subject to image burn-in, however, much as early CRTs were (remember the days when screen savers were more than a personal statement?), and it does lose brightness over time. Display manufacturers have been hard at work on that problem. Craig McManis, vice president of sales and marketing for the industrial displays division of Pioneer New Media Technologies, says that it takes 30,000 hours for his company"s plasma displays to lose half their brightness. An always-on display in an airport might need replacement every three years or so, but that translates into a lot of TV viewing at home.
Plasma screens remain very expensive for mainstream home theater use, but vendors like Panasonic, Pioneer, Samsung, and Sony all now offer sub-$10,000 panels. Most of these displays work at a resolution of 640 by 480, however, and may not satisfy your image-quality standards.
Pioneer"s 40-inch, 640-by-480 PDP-V402, which costs less than $7500 on the street, is a case in point. At a normal TV viewing distance, our Top Gun DVD looked quite good, but videophiles would doubtless have found the images a bit grainy. Unless viewed from a fairly long distance, Windows applications also tend to look unattractive on such a big, low-resolution screen; and the unit lacks HDTV support.
In contrast, Pioneer"s new, top-of-the-line PDP-502MX, with its 50-inch screen, 3.5-inch thickness, and 1024 by 768 resolution, looks great--and this unit does support HDTV.
Few of us have that kind of money for home entertainment, however. So while you wait for the prices of plasma screens to come down, Stanford Resources analyst Paul Semenza suggests a good alternative: a $2000 rear-projection TV with a large 50- to 60-inch display.
If you want to purchase a plasma display now, note both the resolution and size: A 40-inch panel might be fine in a boardroom or reception area, but larger rooms will probably need to have a bigger screen. An on-site service warranty is a definite plus. Plasma displays, though thin, weigh more than you might expect and are no fun to cart around. And finally, McManis says that users who want to display data should confirm the screen is Windows Hardware Quality Lab-compliant.
Electrically operated display devices have developed from electromechanical systems for display of text, up to all-electronic devices capable of full-motion 3D color graphic displays. Electromagnetic devices, using a solenoid coil to control a visible flag or flap, were the earliest type, and were used for text displays such as stock market prices and arrival/departure display times. The cathode ray tube was the workhorse of text and video display technology for several decades until being displaced by plasma, liquid crystal (LCD), and solid-state devices such as thin-film transistors (TFTs), LEDs and OLEDs. With the advent of metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect transistors (MOSFETs), integrated circuit (IC) chips, microprocessors, and microelectronic devices, many more individual picture elements ("pixels") could be incorporated into one display device, allowing graphic displays and video.
One of the earliest electronic displays is the cathode ray tube (CRT), which was first demonstrated in 1897 and made commercial in 1922.electron gun that forms images by firing electrons onto a phosphor-coated screen. The earliest CRTs were monochrome and were used primarily in oscilloscopes and black and white televisions. The first commercial colour CRT was produced in 1954. CRTs were the single most popular display technology used in television sets and computer monitors for over half a century; it was not until the 2000s that LCDs began to gradually replace them.
1984 Super-twisted nematic display (STN LCD) to improve passive-matrix LCDs, allowing for the first time higher resolution panels with 540x270 pixels.
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Prices of flat-panel monitors are likely to continue dropping through the first half of 2003, but stabilise by mid-year, according to NEC/Mitsubishi, one of the biggest manufacturers in the UK of LCD monitors.
Speaking in London on Tuesday at the launch of nine new NEC/Mitsubishi LCD monitors, general manager John McGrath said he expects a recovery in the notebook market to soak up a lot of the over-supply next summer.
"Prices of 15 inch monitors have come down substantially," said McGrath. "When demand for notebooks gets weak, LCDs are routed to the monitor market, and the monitors get cheaper... the market is being used as an outlet" said McGrath. But, he added, "Some panel makers are hurting to the point where they can"t afford to go on. I expect prices to stabilise by the summer -- there could even be a shortage by then, which could push prices up marginally."
Although LCD monitor prices have fallen for much of 2002, NEC/Mitsubishi"s 15-inch displays underwent a price hike at the beginning of the year when the typical street price rose form about £290 to £310, according to the company"s own figures. The typical street price is currently just under £280, while for some brands such as Samsung and Philips, it is closer to £240.
Like many other monitor manufacturers, NEC/Mitsubishi is turning its attention to LCD technology because prices of CRT monitors have dropped so far that there is no more value to be extracted from 15-inch and 17-inch products; they have become commodity items.
NEC/Mitsubishi"s new LCD range includes models with analogue interfaces for the soho (small office/home office) sector, and models with digital and analogue interfaces aimed at business users.
Prices start at £229 ex VAT for 15-inch models and £599 for 18-inch models. The 19-inch LCD1920NX costs £659 and the 20-inch £LCD2080UX will cost £1,199 when it ships at the end of December.
Three 17-inch models are to launch, with the speaker-equipped multimedia LCD1760VM costing £399 when it ships at the end of December, the thin-bezel LCD1760NX costing £375 due in January. Pricing has yet to be set for the low-end, analogue interface-only LCD1701, which is also due to ship in January. A 30inch display, the LCD3000, tops off the range at £2,697. A 40-inch model is due in February.
In November the company began selling for the first time through a retail store when PC World began stocking the 15-inch LCD1511M and the 17-inch LCD1711M - priced respectively at £279 and 429 inc VAT.