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235 points rbanffy | 8 comments | | HN request time: 0.412s | source | bottom
1. alexwasserman ◴[] No.40763913[source]
A neighbor gave me his aging Apple ColorSync 850 back around 1999/2000 - https://everymac.com/monitors/apple/applevision_colorsync/sp...

67.4 lbs, but 20" and 1600x1200, which was incredible 25 years ago. It was by far the best monitor of my friend group, despite the heft.

It took a long time to find an LCD to replace it with.

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2. MBCook ◴[] No.40764331[source]
Wow. Just that image of the monitor brings back memories of reading Mac magazine because they used that same example pictures on all their ads.
3. lostlogin ◴[] No.40764438[source]
Early LCDs had that dumb dead pixel thing too, which made the upgrade from CRT risky.

Modern screen may have the issue too, but pixels are so small I probably wouldn’t notice.

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4. notarealllama ◴[] No.40764486[source]
Nowadays you get dead lines, like blue or red, and with high resolution it's generally liveable unless you're super sensitive. I'm fairly intolerant and had a Samsung with a blue line, but didn't bother me much.
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5. yard2010 ◴[] No.40765889[source]
Haha AppleVision
6. PlunderBunny ◴[] No.40766776[source]
I think we had one of those in the Remote Sensing Lab at my university. You could fit an entire Civilisation 1 map on screen without having to scroll vertically (you still had to scroll horizontally - natch).
7. neckro23 ◴[] No.40768910[source]
There's a dead pixel on my 4k monitor. It's so small that I think it's just a speck of dust, if I notice it at all.
8. brokenmachine ◴[] No.40771450{3}[source]
I don't believe dead lines are a common problem with modern displays. I would certainly return one if it had a dead line.