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The exact dimensions of displays reflect the economics of avoiding
waste when cutting substrate panels, but there's no economic reason
they have to be wide. E.g. a Gen 10 panel is about 9' x 10'. You could
cut that 6x10 to get 60 ~16x9 panels ~20.5" wide by ~11.5" high, or
7x9 to get 63 ~4:3 panels ~17.5" wide by ~12.5" high.
How the substrates are cut reflects demand. I think wide screens
dominate the market for larger computer displays because more
consumers use them to watch DVDs and playing games than for
professional applications.
2011/7/29 Rédacteur en chef <editorialstandards -at- gmail -dot- com>:
>>
>> o Ruth Sessions is looking for a little TW bartering with her post on
>> “swapping monitors?” Seems like there are quite a few folks ready to
>> sacrifice newness for high resolution.
>> In Case You Missed it: This Week @ TechWhirl
>
> A lot of the problem is due to manufacturing economies.
>
> Fabrication plants are set up to make big sheets of screen substrate,
> which are then cut, much in the manner of integrated circuits
> being cut from a wafer.
>
> It just works out that the wide-aspect formats are more economical
> (less waste after cutting) than the squarer formats that many of us
> prefer for practical work reasons.
>
> If our work was mostly watching movies, we'd want wide-screen.
> But we're vastly outnumbered by the users who browse, watch
> movies, tweet... and pretty much don't do anything else with a
> computer.
>
> </kevin>
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