How do you choose the right monitor?
1) Screen size: If you love big screens than you would probably pick something bigger than 20" monitor. Using bigger screens is
more productive for work. On a larger monitor it is possible to push the resolution very high indeed, but if that monitor’s pixel
density is not up to par, you won’t get the maximum possible resolution before the image becomes unreadable. In many cases,
the monitor will not display anything at all, if you tell Windows to use a resolution the monitor cannot handle. Don't expect anything
good about cheap monitors.
2) Resolution of the monitor: Monitors ability to display the higher resolution images is more important than the size of it. It refers
to the number of pixels the screen has, horizontal x vertical. You can see your resolution here:
https://www.whatismyscreenresolution.com/
Here you can easily convert aspect ratio to resolution:
4:3 aspect ratio resolutions: 640×480, 800×600, 960×720, 1024×768, 1280×960, 1400×1050, 1440×1080 ,
1600×1200, 1856×1392, 1920×1440, and 2048×1536.
16:10 aspect ratio resolutions: - 1280×800, 1440×900, 1680×1050, 1920×1200 and 2560×1600.
16:9 aspect ratio resolutions: 1024×576, 1152×648, 1280×720, 1366×768, 1600×900, 1920×1080, 2560×1440 and 3840×2160.
Aspect ratio was originally used in motion pictures, indicating how wide the picture was in relation to its height.
More converting:
720p = 1280 x 720 - is usually known as HD or “HD Ready” resolution
1080p = 1920 x 1080 - is usually known as FHD or “Full HD” resolution
1440p = 2560 x 1440 - commonly known as QHD or Quad HD resolution, and typically seen on gaming monitors and on high-end
smartphones. 1440p is four times the resolution of 720p HD or “HD ready”.
2160p = 3840 x 2160 - commonly known as 4K, UHD or Ultra HD resolution. It’s a very large display resolution and it’s found on
high-end TVs and monitors. 2160p is called 4K because it offers four times the pixels of 1080p FHD or “Full HD”.
4320p = 7680 x 4320 - is known as 8K and it offers 16 times more pixels than the regular 1080p FHD or “Full HD” resolution.
3)Refresh Rate: If you play games, a refresh rates something you might want to consider. Most monitors come with a refresh rate of 60Hz, which means you can only see 60
frames per second when you play (even if your game is getting 100 FPS, you can only see 60 of them on a 60Hz monitor).
A 120Hz monitor provides a smoother gaming experience and allows you to play games in 3D at 60Hz for each eye.
Viewing angle: This refers to how readable the screen is when you look at it from the side and how consistent the colors remain.
Almost all monitors have a 178-degree VA; the cheapest ones tend to be lower.
4)Color:
Talking about color, you have to look how many colors the screen can display and how accurately it can display those colors.
The spectrum of colors a screen can display is called its gamut, colors within the boundaries of a gamut is called a color space,
and for monitors, the gamut is frequently expressed as a percentage of a particular color space.
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