Originally posted by: brblx
lcd's don't burn in.
Originally posted by: FixedMyXfi
Originally posted by: brblx
lcd's don't burn in.
YOU COULD NOT BE MORE WRONG.
The chemistry may be different, but the result is the same. uneven ware of the panel and bad image retention that are permanent.
USE THE GOOGLE FIRST..
Originally posted by: WaitingForNehalem
Originally posted by: FixedMyXfi
Originally posted by: brblx
lcd's don't burn in.
YOU COULD NOT BE MORE WRONG.
The chemistry may be different, but the result is the same. uneven ware of the panel and bad image retention that are permanent.
USE THE GOOGLE FIRST..
No, you're wrong.
Originally posted by: TheStu
I have never, in my entire life, experieced burn in on a single LCD monitor.
Using 'the google' will lead you to any information you want, it is the 21st century and the internet, you can find any piece of information you want, true or otherwise.
Now, on the one hand, you are correct, it is possible for the pixels to get 'stuck' in an on or off position if they are displaying the same thing for too long (the taskbar for example), however, Image Persistence (as I have heard it called for LCDs and Plasmas) can be reversed usually on them as opposed to Burn In on CRTs which cannot.
You can either turn the monitor off for a few hours/days, which should reset all the pixels to off. If that does not work, then the next thing would be to full screen a white image. All white, and leave that up for a few hours/days again. This will set all the pixels to on, so you might need to do a combination of the two.
Originally posted by: fizban140
It is possible to experience burn in with an LCD but it is not permanent.
Originally posted by: ZippyDan
i need a business computer with the following requirements:
quad core
4gb ram or more
dual dvi monitor support at 1920 resolution each
dual 24" monitors
RAID 1 mirror 500gb or more 2xHDs
should i buy or build?