I would avoid those no name projectors and go with a used name brand one from the likes of Sony or NEC. You can get old XGA or WXGA ones very cheaply or sometimes free from schools and businesses that are upgrading, usually with plenty of remaining lamp life, and they will output thousands of lumens rather than hundreds. The cheap projectors more often than not have a native resolution of something like 854x480, and a very poor contrast ratio. I think you ended up with one of the better ones based on that image.
I just found a samsung syncmaster 957p in the trash dumpster near my house, it has VGA and fricking BNC conectors on the back so probably is a high end one, with a really bad and cheap vga to DP adpter it goes 85hz at 1280x960 and 160hz at 800x600 I need to have a better adapter, this CRT sure is capable of much more 🗿
OLED has a different touch screen and there is some active pens that power the pen to make it more conductive... Please revisit this video with OLED and powered pen
I mean if the steam deck can actually be used as a portable digital drawing computer then we could probably pull off sculpting and drawing at the same time through digital Apple you’re gonna be fucked in the future with your iPads watch out there’s a new portable system on the market
Hey, I just found your channel, your channel seems interesting but it seems you haven’t posted in a couple of years and your accounts were deleted, you okay?
If choose Sennheiser, you will never go wrong with it, It is known as the one of top sound engineering and audio production in the world. every conference definitely will include one of Sennheiser products like microphones or headphone or amplifiers . sometimes little bit pricy but worth every penny .
I once used a CRT monitor, and I categorically did not like the flickering and blurring of the image, especially on small text, as well as the glass screen in which everything was reflected as in a mirror These monitors have too many disadvantages, that's why I prefer LCD
CRTs are great for retro games because a lot of those games were made to take advantage of such a display. The fact you can find them for cheap makes it even better. You can make a badass retro gaming setup that's entirely separate from your main gaming rig for super cheap so you don't have to constantly reconnect your monitors too. Grab an old ass office PC or even a raspberry pi and install something like lakka (linux distro meant specifically for emulator boxes).
Someone tested high end CRT one of those PVM monitors against the best Oled on sale today and the crazy thing is the 20 year old CRT was better than the $2500 monitor lol and it had a higher refresh rate too
I have found a great addition to CRT. A hardware scaler. My scaler is Kramer VP-724XL. The only specific thing about this scaler is that I found cheap used one. Otherwise Extron or something else will also do. But most of them have problem of not having VGA output. Or else they have D-SUB pin output, but with some RGB TV signal which is not VGA. Modern games think they run in 1280x960, and then hardware downscaled to 640x480 with nostalgic scanlines. I like this feeling of getting used to scanlines and looking through them. There is something magical in this graphics. Modern games won't run that good on CRT if I try to run them in authentic 640x480.
What do I think about using a CRT monitor for modern gaming? I now use a CRT monitor for gaming and only a CRT monitor, because it is the best choice for gaming today. The main thing that is important to me is the complete absence of input lag on the monitor. This allows the player to have much better control. Response time and color rendering also matter. The benefit from a high refresh rate in a CRT is much higher than the benefit from a high refresh rate in an LCD monitor. Summarizing everything together, I came to the conclusion that an LCD monitor could never replace my CRT monitor. The return of CRT monitors to the market is inevitable. Once upon a time, just as CRT monitors were forgotten, tube sound amplifiers and vinyl records were also forgotten. Today, these technologies are making a comeback and are in great demand on the market. If our world has not gone crazy, CRT monitors for games will return to the market and make a success. I have just one comment. For some reason I can't stand pot-bellied monitors; I only recognize the Sony Trinitron as an acceptable CRT monitor for gaming.
I just got a massive 24 inch Elsa Ecomo 24H96, a very High End CRT for CAD. It has a maximum Resolution of 1920x1200 at 75hz and my god, it is a sight to behold!
For some reason when I opted for flat monitors instead CRTs, my eyes were getting more tired. I always heard that CRTs are more damaging to the eye, but I experienced quite the opposite. I could use a CRT for 10 hours without any problem, while on modern monitors I was getting tired after 2-3 hours. My first flat monitor was a Samsung 2032BW, so it was not one of those high latency displays.
The color being described as dark on the CRT might mean that you didn't calibrate the display gamma, you really need to do that on CRTs if you want an accurate display picture. Just type "Calibrate display color" in the Windows search bar, and it will bring up the tool, and give you instructions on what to do, once you're done, it will save a custom ICC profile with the calibrated gamma for your display, without it content will just look way too dark, and it will often crush the blacks, this will also not affect the black level, so you will still get CRT's near-perfect black level. Overall though, great job explaining the strengths and weaknesses of CRTs, and clearing up doubts on whom they might be appealing for (I found that for me, the absolute best use case for CRTs is playing horror games, the black level and smooth non pixelated picture just add a big boost to immersion)
My pipe dream is someone making a steam deck like device with built in active pen support but the more realistic approach is something like the colors live pen but with either a USB or Bluetooth connection and fine tuned for the capacitive sensitivity of the deck and with the new oled model having a 180hz polling rate it should give a much better drawing experience.