[quote="l3eeron";p="82099"]
Important specs to pay attention to:
size vs resolution - This is really a matter of preference. Both a 22" and 24" can run 1920x1200, its up to you if you want the pixels cramed into a smaller screen.
Response rates - The time it takes one pixel to change from one color to another. There are two response rates. Gray to gray and black to white. Many monitors will advertise the black/white response time because its ALWAYS faster than the gray to gray. Make sure the gray to gray response is no greater than 5ms. This is the most important spec to look at . If you're using it for games and movies, a slow response rate will exhibit ghosting and tearing (blurry edges, bottom half of screen might not sync up to the top half, respectively)
Contrast - This is the difference between the darkest pixel and the lightest pixel the monitor can produce. The higher the better. 800:1 is decent and should work fine. I wouldn't go any lower than 800:1.
Native resolution - This is the resolution the monitor was intended to run. Make sure your vid card can run the at the monitor's native resolution. That way there's no middle man (either you vid card drivers, or monitor has its own scaling) inbetween resampling the video signal to scale it down, inhibiting the performance.
My suggestion:
This monitor would be awesome
http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications ... CatId=2775
Samsung 2253BW 22"
1680x1050 widescreen format
2ms gray to gray
1000:1
HDCP (HDTV ready)
DVID and RBG connections
I didnt shop around for better prices, Im sure this would be an easy deal on eBay.
[/quote]
Size vs resolution, if you have a smaller screen with the same resolution a a larger screen, you will see a finer picture
Response times and what not... they have nothing to do with screen tearing and bottom half not syncing with the top half. This is the cause of vertical sync being disabled so many of us gamers can say we get 200 fps when your screen refresh rate it only 60Mhz. The screen refresh rate is the rate at which your screen changes picture. The higher the better. 75MHz and above is what you should look for.