The response rate is how quickly the pixels are able to change colors. This is important if you have moving images, such as in websites or gaming. The response rate is measured in milliseconds. A response rate should be a lower number for a better performance. An 8ms response time works very well for gaming and a 20ms response time works fine for things like word processing.
The response rate is how quickly the pixels are able to change colors. This is important if you have moving images, such as in websites or gaming. The response rate is measured in milliseconds. A response rate should be a lower number for a better performance. An 8ms response time works very well for gaming and a 20ms response time works fine for things like word processing.
It is typically synonymus with Monitor, or Display. It's the device which displays when you see 'on-screen' in front of you.
This would generally be observed on a laptop/notebook system when you are using the integrated screen and do not have an external monitor attached. If you try to switch from one display to the other, it will tell you it has no external display to switch to.
No 4 letter words but: VDU Monitor Display All mean computer screen.
1080 pixels per image
The world is round, and maps are flat. It is difficult to accurately display a round object on a flat piece of paper.
NO crt is the old picture tube type monitor (not flat at all, rather bulky and really really heavy) liquid-crystal display (LCD) are all the new monitors (hdtvs, flat panel monitors, the screen inside your zune/i-crap-pod, etc...
IF you mean 'what DOES display mean' - display means 'show'
Do you mean the Playstation 3D display screen. Yes but the Wii could not make full use of it's capabilities
WrisTech monitor des not display any reding. Instead it shows ERROR on the blank screen.
The backlighting is exactly what it says. There's an LED light source behind the screen which improves the brightness of the display electronically.
The meaning of the word oscilloscope is a device used for viewing oscillations, electrical current or voltage or, with a display on the screen of a cathode-ray tube.