Playing PC Games on an HDTV
- BigSlideHimself
- DBB Ace
- Posts: 315
- Joined: Tue Oct 26, 2004 4:25 pm
Playing PC Games on an HDTV
Do any of you do this? If you have a 40 inch 1080p it should look pretty good, but how do you like it compared to a good lcd monitor?
- Testiculese
- DBB Material Defender
- Posts: 4689
- Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2001 3:01 am
- BigSlideHimself
- DBB Ace
- Posts: 315
- Joined: Tue Oct 26, 2004 4:25 pm
- Testiculese
- DBB Material Defender
- Posts: 4689
- Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2001 3:01 am
It's is AWESOME for surfing and type. They are just big LCD's. Crystal clear. The image quality is exactly the same as your 20\".
As a programmer, I stare at an entire screenful of text for hours on my 40\". I'd like a bit more vertical space, but this is a TV, it's spec'd for movies.
Just don't get plasma. Whatever you do. Don't. Get. Plasma.
As a programmer, I stare at an entire screenful of text for hours on my 40\". I'd like a bit more vertical space, but this is a TV, it's spec'd for movies.
Just don't get plasma. Whatever you do. Don't. Get. Plasma.
-
- Defender of the Night
- Posts: 13477
- Joined: Thu Nov 05, 1998 12:01 pm
- Location: Olathe, KS
- Contact:
Re:
In two or three years, you're buying a new TV because your screen just burned out....and they're more expensive to boot.Warlock wrote:whats wrong with plasma?Testiculese wrote:Just don't get plasma. Whatever you do. Don't. Get. Plasma.
- Testiculese
- DBB Material Defender
- Posts: 4689
- Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2001 3:01 am
And they are the worst of the flatscreen TV's. The picture quality is crap. Go look at one in the store, walk up to about a foot or two away and you can see the pixels. They only have a 2-3 year shelf life, and I'm sorry, but if I just plunked down $3000 for a TV and it only lasts 3 years? Not a good investment.
- Testiculese
- DBB Material Defender
- Posts: 4689
- Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2001 3:01 am
- Testiculese
- DBB Material Defender
- Posts: 4689
- Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2001 3:01 am
Hey, I take exception to the anti-plasma sentiments here! I just bought one a few months ago...after nearly buying an LCD.
I'll agree that for a computer monitor you definitely want an LCD over plasma. But for TV watching plasma is awesome. The only reason I could justify an LCD at this point is if I watched a lot of TV during the day in a bright room without curtains.
However, from what I've read recently, this may be the year that LCD finally catches up to plasma in picture quality. If true, all plasma has going for it moving forwards is that it's cheaper than LCD at large screen sizes. And when LCD makers stop selling at a loss, that margin may get wider.
Anyway, before buying anything, check out this awesome resource:
http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/
I'll agree that for a computer monitor you definitely want an LCD over plasma. But for TV watching plasma is awesome. The only reason I could justify an LCD at this point is if I watched a lot of TV during the day in a bright room without curtains.
However, from what I've read recently, this may be the year that LCD finally catches up to plasma in picture quality. If true, all plasma has going for it moving forwards is that it's cheaper than LCD at large screen sizes. And when LCD makers stop selling at a loss, that margin may get wider.
Anyway, before buying anything, check out this awesome resource:
http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/
-
- Defender of the Night
- Posts: 13477
- Joined: Thu Nov 05, 1998 12:01 pm
- Location: Olathe, KS
- Contact:
And if you go DLP, ABSOLUTELY buy some kind of battery power supply just in-case you loose power. If power went out before you properly shut the TV down, the cooling fan won't spin and your bulb will literally explode....making your TV a giant paperweight. Those bulbs aren't cheap either! They retail for several hundred dollars easy.
-
- Defender of the Night
- Posts: 13477
- Joined: Thu Nov 05, 1998 12:01 pm
- Location: Olathe, KS
- Contact:
Re:
I hate to break it to you Ferno, but I have personally seen this happen. Hell, I know people that work on TVs FOR A LIVING that rant about it all the time when DLP is mentioned. Instead of throwing up the BS flag, try and do your research first. Or at the very least, you should ask me if I had personally seen this.Ferno wrote:I think we need a word from someone who's in the home theatre business because I smell BS.
However, since I doubt you'll believe me anyways, I'll throw up a little wikipedia action for you. Click here When the TV is powered off, it uses the AC power to run a small fan that blows over this bulb to help it cool down as it is extremely hot (akin to the halogen bulbs in projectors....only hotter). If power went out, and the fan doesn't have any juice to spin.....that bulb is toast. They make a pretty good pop when they go too.
Any projection system, DLP, LCD, that uses high intensity lamps needs to let the lamp cool down before what is called another re-strike. A striking voltage of thousands of volts is applied to the bulb envelope on startup to ionize the gas in the envelope and start electron conduction. Striking a hot lamp envelope often blows them up. Each strike takes allot of hours off the bulb as well. I told a client to avoid doing this and he didn't listen.
After a 7 hour marathon session of projection he shut off the projector, then 3 minutes later tried re-igniting the bulb and struck it according to witnesses there at least 10 times. When it finally did ignite it blew up so violently it dislodged connectors and boards in the projector and caused a catastrophic failure.
So it's not just DLP that suffers from this but any projection lamp based system. Oh and that lamp blowing up finally convinced my client to protect his new projection TV, HTPC, stereo, and DVD with a large UPS system. Literally within a minute after my leaving his residence and as I was driving away, the power went out in Town for 90 minutes and he didn't even notice. The UPS system saved all his equipment and allowed him to continue using his system.
Google up projector lamp care and there is a wealth of good advice there.
After a 7 hour marathon session of projection he shut off the projector, then 3 minutes later tried re-igniting the bulb and struck it according to witnesses there at least 10 times. When it finally did ignite it blew up so violently it dislodged connectors and boards in the projector and caused a catastrophic failure.
So it's not just DLP that suffers from this but any projection lamp based system. Oh and that lamp blowing up finally convinced my client to protect his new projection TV, HTPC, stereo, and DVD with a large UPS system. Literally within a minute after my leaving his residence and as I was driving away, the power went out in Town for 90 minutes and he didn't even notice. The UPS system saved all his equipment and allowed him to continue using his system.
Google up projector lamp care and there is a wealth of good advice there.