QUOTE(Mochan @ Feb 17 2011, 09:21 AM)
Hi, will I see difference upgrading from 22 to 24 inch? Looking to get B2430H.
2 inch increase will be like enormous change to me.
I've used B2430H. My experience is quite bad.
1. I got a terrible pain for the first 3 days and I got 2 times 1-1 replacement because of dead pixel (1st replacement) and subpixel problem (2nd replacement). Its like nightmare going up and down Lowyat Plaza and a bit

with All IT staffs to get replacement. In the warranty got "
Zero Bright Defect (ZBD) only applies when it occurs within 7 working days from purchased date, regardless of dot quantity, the defective LCD panel/module shall be replace by SAMSUNG.".
Info2. Color is not accurate, Grey is a bit yellowish. Not for serious graphic works
3. Poor grads/banding. My office's cheap Philips 201E can produce images with amazing smooth gradient without much distortion and banding.
4. Text too sharp/antialias problem? Only with Full/Intelligent Image mode will fix it.
5. No DPMS. The computer already shutdown or sleep, the monitor still wake up with No Signal screen. Irritating in the night mode.
6. Goose neck stand, unstable on my desk. Fixed it with my L-2000 VESA mount.
Hmmmm ... that's what I think of this model.
The rest quite ok with me. BTW already replaced it with Dell IPS with 5 years warranty. Dell have amazing dead pixel warranty without much hassle.
I hope you are lucky buying one, or try LED lit models with cheaper price.
Added on February 17, 2011, 3:00 pmQUOTE(everling @ Feb 16 2011, 02:55 PM)
Not quite true.
I can do 1920x1200 through VGA and it is sharp, without colour distortion or flickering. It is quite dependent on the quality of the cable. I have seen the problems you have described with different VGA cables.
And HD videos not limited by DRM will readily play over VGA.
I agree there's a dependency according to the quality of the cable, the length and the termination.
However VGA signal often described as RGB means 3 colors in analogue signal (prone to analog distortion) while DVI (digital signal) will correctly tell any pixel to show the desired color.
QUOTE
The DVI interface uses a digital protocol in which the desired illumination of pixels is transmitted as binary data. When the display is driven at its native resolution, it will read each number and apply that brightness to the appropriate pixel. In this way, each pixel in the output buffer of the source device corresponds directly to one pixel in the display device, whereas with an analog signal the appearance of each pixel may be affected by its adjacent pixels as well as by electrical noise and other forms of analog distortion.
Should u use 1080p resolution with analogue VGA, you can apply >60Hz with it. DVI single link can only show 60Hz.
This post has been edited by jeopardise: Feb 17 2011, 03:00 PM