vx2433wm_m

After impulse buying, you generally get this shock of how much money you actually have spent and questions floating in your head like “Did I need this?” – well, I guess you could say I got these feelings but they were far from strong as I believe I made the right choice. This evening, after work sitting at KFC in my girlfriends car, I got an inclination to look on MSY (a wholesaler of computer equipment) on my iPhone, I”m unsure why but I did. I became quite focused on what I “wanted” to add to my technology collection at home, I actually forgot about my food! Anyway, moving forward. Looking through the PDF on my iPhone, I skipped to the LCD Monitor section, viewing what seems to be affordable prices for great LCD screens, especially top notch brands like Acer, Asus, ViewSonic, Samsung etc. MSY have always been a great provider of excellent brands at unmatched prices, not to mention I”ve been wanting to buy a LCD monitor for quite some now, it just hit me — I will buy a LCD monitor…I just wasn”t sure which one. With the clock ticking over to 6:00PM, I had only 30 mins to make a decision on what LCD monitor to buy, that means researching pricing, quality, feedback, design the whole works in a period of 10 minutes, find it on the website, review the specs then drive to MSY all in this limited time…could it happen? Well, theoretically, of course — anything can happen, however to make a proper, logical calculation, time would be needed and waiting the next day would”ve probably been ideal. However, since I like to keep things exciting, I decided then and there I will go with something I know, like and have seen much of — ViewSonic. That was figured out, so the next step was the size. This wasn”t too hard, given the fact I was upgrading from a 19″ LCD Television, so I wanted to aim around 22″-24″. From there, I picked out the ViewSonic VX2433WM which was $265. Quickly opened a new window in Safari, visited ViewSonic’’s website and viewed the specs for the ViewSonic VX2433WM:

LCD Panel Type 23.6″ wide Color TFT Active Matrix LCD 16:9 aspect ratio
Display Area 23.6 inch
True Resolution 1920×1080
Contrast Ratio 1000:1 (typ), 20000:1 (DCR)
Brightness 300 cd/m2 (typ)
Viewing Angle 170° (H), 160° (V) at 5:1 c/r
Response Time 5ms ( typ), 2ms ( max)
Panel Surface Anti-Glare, Hard coating (3H)
Light Source 50,000 hrs (typ.)
Input Signal Analog RGB Analog (75 ohms, 0.7 / 1.0 Vp-p)
Frequency Fh: 24~83KHz; Fv: 50~76Hz
Sync Separate Sync / Composite Sync / SOG
Compatibility PC VGA up to 1920×1080 non-interlaced
Mac Power Mac, up to 1920×1080
Connector Analog 15 pin mini D-sub × 1
Digital DVI-D (with HDCP) / HDMI
Audio 3.5 mm Audio in / 3.5 mm Audio out
Power 3-pin AC plug (CEE22)
Audio Speakers 2 × 2 watt with SRS WOW sound
Power Voltage AC 100-240V (Universal); 50/60Hz (Switch)
Consumption 45 (typ.)
Dimensions Physical 572mm(W) x 418mm(H) x 231mm(D)
Weight Net 5.0 Kgs

All in all, quite a good monitor, considering the fast refresh rate, high contrast ratio and a beautiful 1920×1080 resolution — with HDMI added too! For the price of $265, these great specs and a beautiful size of 23.6″, I was set. I quickly closed my Safari and directed my lovely girlfriend, Cheryl to MSY (5 mins away). We arrived at 6:15, I walked in, asked for the magical ViewSonic VX2433WM from the techno-guy behind the counter and swiped my beautiful red Westpac credit card. The transaction was now completed, I was handed my receipt and we were on our way! Now generally, any impulse buyer would know this is probably when you would start feeling regret, shame, unusual stomach upsets or simple statements in your head like “You”re an idiot for buying that.”, “Why did you buy that, you don”t need it.” – but, I didn”t. This transaction is of course tax deductible but it’’s something I”ve wanted for quite a while, and probably needed too!

Sitting back as I type this long, word stuffed article, I”m quite surprised at the brightness and beautiful resolution. It really helps clear my head and with so many pixels more, it gives me that crispy background.

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