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Anyone have any experience with these? I'm thinking about buying one, but I would rather have a good monitor and no TV.

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.as...-_-Product
i'd buy a good monitor. my samsung ~25" HDTV monitor was nice, but was nowhere near as bright as my samsung 24" monitor.

what would you be using the TV function for?
(04-18-2010, 09:19 PM)Versus-pwny- link Wrote: [ -> ]i'd buy a good monitor. my samsung ~25" HDTV monitor was nice, but was nowhere near as bright as my samsung 24" monitor.

what would you be using the TV function for?
I really just don't want to drop cash for an HDTV and a monitor. So I would be using the TV function for PS3/Blu-Ray
alright

it'd be best if you could go to a fry's or something and see how bright it really is
(04-19-2010, 04:35 PM)airmax link Wrote: [ -> ][quote author=Versus-pwny- link=topic=4505.msg147574#msg147574 date=1271643583]
i'd buy a good monitor. my samsung ~25" HDTV monitor was nice, but was nowhere near as bright as my samsung 24" monitor.

what would you be using the TV function for?
I really just don't want to drop cash for an HDTV and a monitor. So I would be using the TV function for PS3/Blu-Ray
[/quote]

Just get something with HDMI
my one experience with computers and HDMI was very, very bad

i never noticed the difference in brightness until i put my monitors side by side anyway
(04-21-2010, 06:01 PM)Versus-pwny- link Wrote: [ -> ]my one experience with computers and HDMI was very, very bad

i never noticed the difference in brightness until i put my monitors side by side anyway


It's the same video data!

Quote:A DVI signal is electrically compatible with an HDMI video signal; no signal conversion is required when an adapter or asymmetric cable is used, and consequently no loss in video quality occurs.[3]  As such, HDMI is backward-compatible with Digital Visual Interface digital video (DVI-D or DVI-I, but not DVI-A) as used on modern computer monitors and graphics cards. This means that a DVI-D source can drive an HDMI monitor, or vice versa, by means of a suitable adapter or cable. However, the audio and remote-control features of HDMI will not be available unless the output supports HDMI via a DVI plug (e.g., ATI 3000-series and NVIDIA GTX 200-series video cards).[3]  Additionally, not all devices with DVI input support High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection (HDCP). Without such support by the device, an HDCP-enabled signal source will suppress output and so prevent the device from receiving HDCP-protected content.[88]  All HDMI devices must support sRGB encoding.
i'm just concerned about what he's going to do for sound if he's plugging his ps3 into just a monitor with an HDMI port as opposed to something that can behave like a regular TV

unless you were addressing what i said about brightness, i mean the screen was just not as bright as my other monitor