Drew Wallner
November 20th, 2011, 10:21 PM
I'm planning to replace my aging 5:4 multi-head displays with a single, widescreen, mid-priced IPS monitor. Since I'm mostly looking at 23" and 24" models, one of the key differentiators appears to be between a native resolution of 1920x1080 or 1920x1200 (seems like I can find all my other requirements, within my target budget, in either size/shape).
Besides running Premiere and After Effects and other video tools, this machine is also my primary personal desktop. I'm a strictly amateur "filmmaker" at this point (if and when I get more serious, everything I have will probably be replaced so I'm not looking to make a huge investment in screens right now). I almost never play videogames or watch feature films on this rig, that's living room fare here. If it matters, the computer in question a first-generation '06 Mac Pro with the video card upgraded to a more recent ATI 5770.
In terms of general comfort, I could see myself really enjoying the slightly more square aspect of 16:10, because a little more height is nice for non-editing stuff like web browsers and buddy lists. However one thing that's always irked me all the years that I've had multiple 1280x1024 displays has been never being able to fullscreen an HD video (mine or anyone else's) without interpolation/scaling.
The thing is, both these classes of displays are 1920 pixels wide, so in theory I suppose whenever you fullscreen a video on them, you should get a pixel-perfect display of your video right? Would there just be black bars on the 1200 line screens giving the video exactly 1080 vertical lines? I probably sound paranoid, but even a single row of extra/removed pixels can really mess with your head when working on titles and other sharp graphics.
I'd love to hear from folks who use either of these aspects/resolutions as the primary display on their edit station, particularly if you have only one screen. What did you base your decision on, and how happy are you having used it for a while?
Thanks for any and all advice! :)
Besides running Premiere and After Effects and other video tools, this machine is also my primary personal desktop. I'm a strictly amateur "filmmaker" at this point (if and when I get more serious, everything I have will probably be replaced so I'm not looking to make a huge investment in screens right now). I almost never play videogames or watch feature films on this rig, that's living room fare here. If it matters, the computer in question a first-generation '06 Mac Pro with the video card upgraded to a more recent ATI 5770.
In terms of general comfort, I could see myself really enjoying the slightly more square aspect of 16:10, because a little more height is nice for non-editing stuff like web browsers and buddy lists. However one thing that's always irked me all the years that I've had multiple 1280x1024 displays has been never being able to fullscreen an HD video (mine or anyone else's) without interpolation/scaling.
The thing is, both these classes of displays are 1920 pixels wide, so in theory I suppose whenever you fullscreen a video on them, you should get a pixel-perfect display of your video right? Would there just be black bars on the 1200 line screens giving the video exactly 1080 vertical lines? I probably sound paranoid, but even a single row of extra/removed pixels can really mess with your head when working on titles and other sharp graphics.
I'd love to hear from folks who use either of these aspects/resolutions as the primary display on their edit station, particularly if you have only one screen. What did you base your decision on, and how happy are you having used it for a while?
Thanks for any and all advice! :)