
They are capable of displaying different color gamuts (sRGB, rec.601, rec.709, etc.), and they cost $$thousands. Those monitors don't use the same front screen technology used in consumer monitors. The LCD's used by pro's are literally hand-tuned and thoroughly calibrated every few hours or so (I said every few hours, not every few days). The typical computer LCD is inherently incapable of displaying color with any great degree of accuracy. Of course we all know that CRT's have disappeared, so we're kinda stuck with LCDs.
Acer lcd monitor x223w shifted screen pro#
Any pro in the video processing industry will tell you this. When it comes to "accuracy" in a computer display - referring to color gamut (only vaguely related to the "number" of colors), contrast range, and adherence to any "official" display standard - no LCD made today is as capable as a well-designed CRT. Under those conditions, any color or black level adjustments you make to a video on that monitor will look very different on every TV set in the world, and it won't be pretty.

If you read online consumer reviews at Amazon, Newegg, etc., you'll see remarks such as "really bright and sharp" (meaning that by sRGB/D65 standards it's way too bright and uses phony edge enhancement) - or "the color is great", a statement that has no meaning except, probably, that Red is oversaturated and the actual color temp is somewhere around 9000K (too blue for graphics work). Thanks guys and gals !! 8) The answer(s) to your question is really, really complicated. If you could pick a specific manufacturer and model, which would be your personal choice, and why ?


I'm using tmpgenc 4.0 express and virtualdubmod for color restoration. I'm currently using a Viewsonic 17 inch display which is okay, but for color, brightness and contrast, I still need to burn a dvd-rw and play it on a 35 inch crt to make final judgements.
Acer lcd monitor x223w shifted screen Pc#
I was walking past the pc monitors at my local mass mechandiser and saw Samsung and HP lcd displays in the 25 and 27 inch range and thought, hmmm.
