Cinema Display?
Over the past few months, I have been deciding what to save for. I have gone between the new iMac, to Powerbook, iBook, and finally, decided on the Powermac. (What ever is the highest end when I buy) Anyways, all that is left to decide is the screen. I need something very large, and am VERY tempted by the Cinema Display. The price is high, but from what I have read, it seems worth it especially for how easy it is on the eyes. Because I do design, I really want a "perfect" screen, aka no dead pixels. For anyone that uses one, have there been any with dead pixels? Thanks. (Sorry for my confusing writing, I am tired. Darn school projects.)
Comments
Pictures do not even come close to doing that thing justice. Seeing a picture of it is like getting a description of it. And that is the only way I can describe it. It looks totaly different in person, and bigger. Much bigger. Believe me when I say that Apple does not want to display the new iMac's next to a Cinema Display. They are both fantastic, but the confusion could cause someone to have a stroke on the spot. I could go on about it for days. So I'll stop now.
<img src="graemlins/oyvey.gif" border="0" alt="[No]" />
BTW, I've never seen a Cinema Display WITH a dead pixel so that's good too
Now that I have upgraded to OS X little problems I had encountered when trying to run 9.2 alone on the combination
I found myself absolutely satisfied, and I was one of those early buyers of the ADC version at the awful price of $3999. Of course, I was mad <img src="graemlins/embarrassed.gif" border="0" alt="[Embarrassed]" /> Yet, I am so very happy that I dream of a PowerBook with an ADC port so I can run Japanese DVDs as well as my American ones now going on the G4 Cube.
By the way, anyone seen a new Cinema Display recently? Does the color scheme now match the latest PowerMacs? <img src="confused.gif" border="0">
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By the way, anyone seen a new Cinema Display recently? Does the color scheme now match the latest PowerMacs? </strong><hr></blockquote>
I saw one a couple weeks ago in MicroCenter, and it seemed to match the Quicksilvers and its little brother and sister displays.
To make it work with a Mac, you either need a video card with an OpenLDI connector, or an SGI MultiLink adapter. It's a black box with a built-in scaler for dealing with non-native resolutions (and it does a wondrous job), and it includes three inputs: VGA, DVI, and Digital RGB. You can find the black box and the display on Ebay for under a thousand dollars sometimes.
I've been running two of these for a few years now, and they're just great. One of mine has one dead pixel in the extreme lower right hand corner. To be quite honest I never notice it. Most manufacturers won't consider your display defective unless it has more than three dead pixels.
The Cinema Display is gorgeous, but I figured I would give you this option... you could certainly save an awful lot of money ;-)
<strong>Might I suggest saving over $1500 on the Cinema Display, and get the display I've raved about on here before: The SGI 1600SW. It's a 17.3" widescreen flat panel, with a 1600X1024 resolution identical to that of the Cinema display. It has a "60hz" pixel response rate, and a contrast rating identical to that of the Cinema display. Since it is smaller, it does have a higher dpi at 110 dpi.
To make it work with a Mac, you either need a video card with an OpenLDI connector, or an SGI MultiLink adapter. It's a black box with a built-in scaler for dealing with non-native resolutions (and it does a wondrous job), and it includes three inputs: VGA, DVI, and Digital RGB. You can find the black box and the display on Ebay for under a thousand dollars sometimes.
I've been running two of these for a few years now, and they're just great. One of mine has one dead pixel in the extreme lower right hand corner. To be quite honest I never notice it. Most manufacturers won't consider your display defective unless it has more than three dead pixels.
The Cinema Display is gorgeous, but I figured I would give you this option... you could certainly save an awful lot of money ;-)</strong><hr></blockquote>
1.) 22 inch is a bit different than 17
2.) I have heard they have horrible color reproduction
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1.) 22 inch is a bit different than 17
2.) I have heard they have horrible color reproduction</strong><hr></blockquote>
Nope, they don't. That was my biggest concern as well being a graphic web designer and I am pleasantly surprised. My one complaint is the constrast ratio, could be 350:1 instead of 300:1, but I can live with that as this thing is gorgeous. Also, LCDs are perfect for anyone who deals with photos, they are crisp and any imperfection or over compression is really noticable, another reason why I love mine.
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1.) 22 inch is a bit different than 17
2.) I have heard they have horrible color reproduction</strong><hr></blockquote>
Yeah, to follow-up, the color reproduction is quite exceptional on the SGI displays. And yeah, I've seen a Cinema Display next to an SGI display, and yes, the 22" is gorgeous next to it... but based on the ebay prices of these displays... you could get two of the SGI displays for the price of one Cinema Display. Besides, I've grown to enjoy the higher dpi on the SGI display