Wednesday, September 15, 2010
difference surrounded by medical level monitor and run of the mill computer monitor?
Answer:
What it is, is that the mecial monitor can feel a HIGHER resolution than a normal monitor. The superior resolution will give the picture a more faithful, 3d look. But when you buy a monitor for your computer you have to buy the monitor it can toy with. If you computer can handle one and only 1024x750 maximum resolution, then you resolve to buy a monitor that can handle up to 1600x1024 resolution, thinking that the highly developed price monitor is better than the lower resolution one. Well if your monitor can not display the higher resolution than it is a surplus of money. Your computer has to know how to send out the signal for the sophisticated resolution or your monitor can not display it.
The medical computers have really flawless video cards than the normal computer have. There are other advantages too
Pixel density is your answer. Plus the deflection yoke if it is a CRT. Same for TV. Computer monitors have a high scan rate, and smaller pixel size, with more of them. If you go back to the weak days of using a TV for your monitor, you have to set your computer to 40 characters per queue. While a pricey computer monitor could have 80 characters per queue.
I built some of the first color monitors. The convergence board was as big as the eyeshade! Then using a stator wound yoke with 33 poles instead of 4, that convergence board really come down in size. This also reduced the "barrel and pin" on the peak.
A medical grade monitor also is one that can function without risk in the presence of a elevated level of oxygen.
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