[GTALUG] cheap today: 43 inch UltraHD TV

Lennart Sorensen lsorense at csclub.uwaterloo.ca
Mon Jun 26 10:06:50 EDT 2017


On Sun, Jun 25, 2017 at 06:31:50AM -0500, o1bigtenor via talk wrote:
> On Sun, Jun 25, 2017 at 12:16 AM, D. Hugh Redelmeier via talk <
> talk at gtalug.org> wrote:
> 
> > | Sounds like a decent idea if you only want 1 (!) monitor.
> > | Me - - I went for 4  - - 1900 x 1080 IIRC
> >
> > I prefer a single monitor with that many pixels: 4 x 1920 x 1080 ==
> > UltraHD.  I don't really think that multiple UltraHD monitors would
> > help me.
> >
> 
> Sorry, even if I could afford such a beast I likely wouldn't be able to
> read
> everything on it. I used to use 6 point fonts in spreadsheets to get more
> on the screen when I 'only' had a 1600 x 1200 monitor but now need to
> use glasses even with a 10 point font but then with 2 monitors giving me
> a 3820 x 1080 virtual I've got lots of room.
> 
> >
> > I happen to have a 1920x1200 monitor on my desk too, but I kind of
> > switch modes when switching monitors (they are hooked to diffrent
> > computers).  The UltraHD monitor subtends a large arc.
> >
> > |  and for that you MUST use the
> > | nvidia
> > | drivers and that install was a real hoot!
> >
> > That might be worth a write-up.
> >
> 
> Alas I should have written it up when I first did it (2012) but as it was a
> work spanned over 2 weeks before I got it 'right' I am not sure I was in
> the
> right head space to have noted things down.
> 
> The lack of support for more than 2 monitors even in linux variants
> themselves
> is personally very frustrating. I needed to, again, reestablish this when
> my
> main system disk cratered and I needed to return the whole mess for
> warranty
> reasons (repair departments seem to only understand M$ and must needs
> alter things to fit their ideas even after I had asked them NOT to change
> anything! That was also an interesting odyssey!).
> 
> Even after having to do some 'interesting' stuff to get my monitor system
> working I would recommend such for anyone doing more than trivial work
> on their systems.
> The impetus for this thinking was in a report that I ran into in the early
> 2000s where it was found that office workers were effective in relationship
> to
> their amount of screen real estate (the more the better). At that time I
> was on
> a 1600 x 1200 and found having room to have multiple windows open was
> very useful. That was a CRT so when I went to LCD I migrated up a notch.
> 
> Presently I use 20 virtual desktops and if there were a browser that would
> stand up to it I would have an incidence on most of them and likely more
> than one. Alas even 2 incidences of a browser creates problems. As I have
> lots of system memory (north of 16 GB installed) there shouldn't be any
> issues
> besides sloppy programming in browsers and there isn't.
> 
> >
> > | (My system is 3 monitors in a landscape mode and one in a portrait mode.
> > | The vertical one is used a lot when reading pdfs.)
> >
> > All lined up?  The more obvious arrangement would be 2 by 2.
> >
> 
> Setup is 1 portrait beside 2 landscape and then a 3rd (lower) also in
> landscape.
> Gives lots of room for columns in the lower and enough in the other for
> some
> interesting stuff. 2 virtual screen - lower of 3840 x 1080 and the upper of
> 3000 x 1920 (the pocket of 1920 x 840 does produce some issues).

I helped a friend build and setup a machine about a year ago and we did
a pair of 1920x1200 screens side by side, both vertical.  That works
quite nicely (especially since the Dell U2415 has about 7mm border on
the top edge.)  You almost don't notice the line down the middle.

-- 
Len Sorensen


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