LCD Resolution: When Bigger Is Actually Smaller

Introduction

Whether you?re in the market to replace the hulking CRT that is making your desk sag or you?re planning on purchasing a laptop, some knowledge of LCD technology will help you make a better decision.

Unfortunately, the contradiction of today?s Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) technology is that bigger often means smaller. And as a result, consumers who think a bigger screen will be easier on their eyes are often disappointed in their purchase.

LCDs vs. CRTs

LCD monitors are some of today?s hottest computing and consumer electronics products, and for good reason. They take up less room than traditional Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) monitors, weigh much less, consume far less power, are much easier to read text on, and let?s face it ? they just look cooler. However, there also are a few drawbacks to LCDs, including a slower response time, a reduced viewing angle, a higher price and the fact that they have only one optimal resolution.

The last point is an important one, and something that first time LCD or laptop buyers need to understand.

If you?re used to CRT monitors, you probably know a little about screen resolution. The higher your resolution, the more screen ?real estate? you have and as a result, the smaller things will appear. This is because at higher resolutions, more pixels are viewable. Since each image or part of the screen is made up of a set number of pixels, if you are able to fit more pixels into the same physical area of screen, the image will appear smaller.

This is normally not a concern with CRT users, because CRTs can be resized to larger or smaller resolutions with no problem.


The Designtechnica review page shown in 800 x 600 resolution (left) and 1280 x 800 resolution (right).

The main issue with changing the screen resolution on a CRT monitor is that it affects the refresh rate. The refresh rate refers to the number of times that the screen redraws the image every second. Since there is always movement on your screen, the image needs to be redrawn quite often for it to appear that it is in motion.

Typically, the optimal refresh rate for a CRT monitor is 75Hz, meaning that the image is redrawn 75 times every second. The highest you?ll need is 85Hz, and some people can tell the difference between a 75Hz and 85Hz refresh rate. Anything higher than 85Hz generally won?t be noticeable and can also be dangerous to your monitor, as some people have the tendency to push their monitors to refresh rates beyond what they were intended to use. Anything lower than 75Hz and you may notice a flicker of the image as it refreshes.

Too low of a refresh rate is a common occurrence and is often a major case of tired eyes and office fatigue. ?Power users? will tell you they will often sit down at other people?s workstations and notice right away that the refresh rate was too low for comfort.

When dealing with LCDs, refresh rate is not much of a concern since they use a different technology to draw the image. Refresh rates as low as 40Hz or 60Hz are perfectly acceptable with LCD monitors.

What is important is the concept of response time ? the time in milliseconds it takes for the screen to update the pixel colors. This is a big deal because a slower response time will give the illusion of ?ghosting? ? the effect of pixels not updating with new information fast enough, so that a trail is left behind a moving object. This usually happens in high action movies or games and is one of the main reasons why LCDs are often not recommended for gamers. This is changing however, as displays with 20ms ? which are just fine for gaming – are becoming more prevalent.

When Bigger is Actually Smaller

While CRT displays can be adjusted to the user?s preference in resolution settings, LCDs only look good and operate properly in their native resolution. This is the ?sweet spot? of the LCD ? the resolution it was meant to be used at.

And this is where most LCD owners, especially those that purchase new laptops, have the most issues with their displays. The problem is that the higher the native resolution of an LCD more information can fit on the screen, making text and graphics appear smaller. This is the converse of what many laptop buyers want ? most think that buying a larger screen with a higher resolution will allow them to see their desktop as larger. This, however, is not the case. A higher resolution means that there are more pixels per inch, making everything smaller, but giving the desktop more room.
 
If you?ve ever seen the acronyms that describe LCD screen resolution and had no idea what that means, you?re not alone. The following list explains the current LCD resolutions:

Screen Resolution – 4:3 Aspect Ratio

Abbreviation

Full Name

Resolution

CGA

Color Graphics Adaptor

320 x 200

EGA

Enhanced Graphics Adaptor

640 x 350

VGA

Video Graphics Array

640 x 480

SVGA

Super Video Graphics Array

800 x 600

XGA

Extended Graphics Array

1024 x 768

SXGA

Super Extended Graphics Array

1280 x 1024

SXGA+

Super Extended Graphics Array

1400 x 1050

UXGA

Ultra Extended Graphics Array

1600 x 1200

QXGA

Quad Extended Graphics Array

2048 x 1536

QSXGA

Quad Super Extended Graphics Array

2560 x 2048

 
Screen Resolution – 16:9 Aspect Ratio (Widescreen)

WXGA

Wide Extended Graphics Array

1366 x 768

WXGA+

Wide Extended Graphics Array

1280 x 800

WSXGA

Wide Super Extended Graphics Array

1600 x 1024

WSXGA+

Wide Super Extended Graphics Array

1680 x 1050

WUXGA

Wide Ultra Extended Graphics Array

1920 x 1200

WQSXGA

Wide Quad Super Extended Graphics Array

3200 x 2048

WQUXGA

Wide Quad Ultra Extended Graphics Array

3840 x 2400

Size – and Resolution – Does Matter

LCD manufacturers offer screens with the same physical dimensions but different resolution options. The higher priced options are always the higher resolutions, and of course, the options that are pushed the most. But as you?ll see, bigger is not always better for most computer users.

Take for instance the 15.4-inch LCD screen that is becoming quite popular with laptop computers. Dell sells their Inspiron 8600 with a 15.4-inch screen with 12 different resolution and processor configurations ? more than enough to confuse the average computer buyer.

The lowest resolution available for the Dimension 8600 is WXGA (1366 x 768). You can also order it with a WSXGA+ (1680 x 1050) or WUXGA (1920 x 1200). What this means is that in the same 15.4-inch display, the WSXGA+ and the WUXGA have more pixels, respectively, than the WXGA display, thus making text and images appear smaller on the higher resolution panels.

As hard as it may be to believe to many ?power users?, the average computer user still has their resolution set to 1024 x 768 or even 800 x 600, so even the WXGA resolution may be a shock to some users.

The forums at Dell?s support site are full of user?s reporting problems with their LCDs. A quick search for ?LCD resolution? in the forums will yield many posts regarding text that is too small to read. And in their attempt to fix that problem, Dell and Microsoft have introduced a new dilemma: to compensate for customers? complaints of small, hard-to-read text, Dell?s high-resolution laptops are pre-configured with a larger than normal font size. Instead of the default 96DPI font, the Dell?s are configured with 120DPI. This may sound like a good solution, but it actually creates more problems. Because Microsoft?s Internet Explorer browser, and to a lesser extent Windows XP, don?t do a good job of handling larger font sizes, images and text will appear blurry or misaligned.

The images below show some of the effects of the 120DPI ?solution? introduced by Dell. As you can see, the Windows Update dialog box appears with text that is cut off at the bottom. An IE ?404 Error? page also shows text that overlaps, and even the Designtechnica site itself appears distorted with the larger fonts.


Text is cut off in the Windows Update dialog box (left) and text in an IE 404 error page gets jumbled (right).


Even the text on Designtechnica’s navigation bar gets jumbled when viewed at 120DPI.

Another side-effect of the larger font size on a high-resolution monitor is that increasing the size of the fonts doesn?t have an effect on items such as toolbars and dialog boxes ? which will still appear small. Some toolbars will scale to a larger size, like the Microsoft Office 2003 toolbars, but the images will appear blurry when their size is increased.

It is important to note that other Web browsers such as Mozilla and Netscape don?t experience this issue with font sizes as they do a better job of scaling the presentation of the Website. But since Microsoft Internet Explorer is by far the most popular browser, and the issue also affects views in the operating system itself, this matter affects the majority of users. It should also be known that this issue doesn?t just affect Dell laptops ? all laptop manufacturers that offer high-resolution displays have to deal with it.

What can be done?

This issue was a hot topic in Dell?s forums for quite some time before even Dell acknowledged it or provided a fix. Users reported calling Dell?s support line for help and being told to re-install the video drivers to fix the issue. Community members came up with a fix – which is now an announcement in the Inspiron video forums ? to modify a registry entry. By changing the ?Activate Scaling? entry from 1 to 0, images will not be scaled larger, which causes the distortion. There is also a fix for IE?s ?Automatic Image Resizing? which can be turned off through the ?Tools? menu.

Unfortunately, these fixes do not address the fact that text can be jumbled or misaligned in many Web pages. And requiring a new laptop buyer to make a registry change ? assuming that they contacted a help-desk person aware of the problem, or thought to do a Web search for the problem ? is not the ideal solution either.

In the end, Microsoft has to do a better job of handling this issue both in Windows and in Internet Explorer. Dell can help by inserting a statement explaining this issue in the literature shipped with their notebooks and displays, and by ensuring their customer support people are aware of the problem. Web designers can also address this by not using fixed-pixel font sizes. Unfortunately, all of these fixes will take some time.

The best way to ?fix? this issue is for consumers to better understand how LCD displays work, and how the screen resolution will look. By making a more informed buying decision, consumers can be sure that they are getting what they want, and aren’t surprised when they view their desktop.

Understand that as the native resolution of a display is increased, the smaller things will appear on the screen. High-resolution displays may be only for the ?power users? ? those that need many windows open at once and have eyes sharp enough to read the small fonts.

Those that already have a problem reading text on their monitor should stay away from the higher resolution options, as the text and images will probably be too small. Running an LCD at a lower-than-native resolution will also introduce blurry text and images. This may limit your choices, but certainly will save you some money as the higher resolution screens cost more.

Before you buy, try to actually view the monitor and make sure that your eyes can handle the size of the fonts and images. Even if you are purchasing online, it may be a good idea to visit a local computer store and look at applications and Web pages on the different screen resolutions.

A little homework will go a long way, and your eyes will thank you for it.

Showing 9 comments

  1. Marc E. at 1:04pm 3rd January 2011 Nice article! But from the comments, I can't believe there is still people missing CRTs. I can just say GOOD RIDDANCE! It was about time we got free from those heavy, bulky, energy consuming, intense electromagnetic field producing, enviornment polluting, eyestrain causing boxes. The article reflected the reality in 2004, but as of january 2011, as LCD panels 5-millisecond response times are common, the ghosting problem is largely reduced for most people, even while playing games. For the guys saying "just lower resolution", I think you still do not get LCD technology. If you use your LCD outside of the native resolution, it WILL GET BLURRY due to interpolation, it is just like that! I think the font size problem has also improved a lot since nowadays more and more webdesigners and application developers are putting more effort into dealing with larger font sizes. I personally use a 120 dpi (125% of the normal size) and found very few software showing overlapped text or garbled graphics problems. For those who are still struggling with the size of fonts while surfing the Web, even after changing their size via Properties menu, I highly recommend you using a decent browser like FireFox who lets you zoom pages quickly with CTRL+mouse wheel. For those wanting an even higher accessibility while viewing webpages, I strongly suggest using the OPERA browser. In Opera, in addition to going fullscreen with F11 and using the CTRL+mousewheel to zoom in, you also have a FIT WIDTH option using hotkey CTRL-F11. This will let you make your text as big as you want while zooming, in fullscreen, without having the text go out of the screen! Just try! Ah, and don't forget SHIFT-G to turn off stupid page animations/side banners and silly formatting when you're at it! Cheers!
  2. Alex L. at 5:14pm 8th August 2010 More over CRT is not a "superior" product. Maybe in invidual specs on paper its better in some ways, but in practice it falls incredibly short of LCD technology. Point in case: Plug a high def device (like Playstation 3 or BlueRay player) into an CRT TV, and set it to like 720p (not even 1080p). What happens? You can't even read letters like "i" and "l" because the TV can't even handle the HD and squiches them between other letters. You'd go blind trying to read the instructions to a sports game (or to anything) on 720p on a CRT.
  3. Alex L. at 5:14pm 8th August 2010 Wow. People... seriously? I realise this article is OLD.. dinosaur old in Tech years, but people are still complaining about "too high" a resulotion? If the resolution is too high, you go to your computer properties / display settings and LOWER the resolution. Having a machine (and monitor) capable of a higher resolution means you can set it to the native resolution for films, and games, etc. If you're a granny looking to read up on pie recepies, then just DECREASE the resolution in your settings (an 2 second fix that is permanent should you wish it to be). Complaining about higher resolutions in the manner argued here is a little over-the-top. If resolutions could not be scalled down via the settings, then that would be an entirely different matter as there are issues with running applications on resultions other than the native resolution, but with computers and TVs in 2010 this is hardly the case.
  4. skeptik at 7:18am 4th August 2010 Would it actually have been the consumer that determined the end of the CRT? If that is the case, I'm quite happy to be blamed for the death of such "superior" tech. I think the decision of which is better is quite subjective. Without the demand & supply that came with it, LCD's would be alot more expensive & inferior to what they currently are. Seems like CRT tech really stagnated & since it couldn't keep up, was in the end ignored by most. Too bad SED tech never came to fruition for the mass market since that would've brought the strengths of CRT's to thin displays :((
  5. OahuRE.com at 6:56pm 17th July 2010 Thanks for your article. I made the exact mistake you mentioned getting a larger screen and then realizing the font was getting too small. It is also good to know that you really have to run at the optimal resolution for the monitor as I tried different resoltuions and it just did not feel right.
  6. Troubled at 1:26am 25th June 2010 The Firefox fix is cool. That will help me. Here is what I think is also going on. Website designers are using smaller text these days because they are designing with monitors that have enlarged fonts. SO then the rest of us have these 6 or less pixel fonts appearing on our screens that we have to deal with. j
  7. Manimaran at 9:30am 25th May 2010 Having bought my laptop with a higher resolution, I was wondering why the text appears small and trying all options in vain to make them appear normal! Your article gave me the proper reasoning. Hmmmm had I had a chance to read your article before I made a decision on the screen resolution......:(.
    Well, thanks for the eyeopener...
  8. Rick at 4:13pm 24th February 2010 This is a great article which I found after buying a new LCD. Changing the DPI Font size on WIndows helped, but not on Web Pages. Fortunately, Firefox has a great feature called Text Zoom Only accessed via the top menu View/Zoom. It increases or decreases text size with a simple Ctrl + or Ctrl -. Thanks
  9. IncidentFlux at 12:58pm 10th February 2010 This article was published in 2004, but still holds a lot of merit and I hate LCD lobbyists for killing the CRT market.

    "drawbacks to LCDs, including a slower response time, a reduced viewing angle, a higher price and the fact that they have only one optimal resolution."

    All these technical problems still not completely resolved in 2010. LCDs... a much lesser inferior technology actually dumped on consumers for pure greed and profit.
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