Business case for dual monitors
McLauchlan, Kevin
Kevin.McLauchlan at safenet-inc.com
Fri May 2 14:56:52 MDT 2008
Good point. And it keeps the outside left and right edges of the
combined desktop well within your visual field. So no onerous
head-turning required... until you get them 3 and 4 displays across.
:-)
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Laura Lemay [mailto:lemay at lne.com]
> Sent: Friday, May 02, 2008 16:16
> To: McLauchlan, Kevin
> Cc: Greg Holmes; TECHWR-L
> Subject: Re: Business case for dual monitors
>
>
>
> > Unfortunately, nobody seems to be making what used to be the
standard
> > ratio monitors any more. They're all wide but shallow. Good if they
> > match movie format for those who view movies on them, but not as
good
> > for a nice tall couple of pages of document, side-by-side.
>
> Lots of widescreen monitors rotate into portrait mode these days.
> The setup all of us have at the job I'm working right now has dual 20-
> inch widescreen rotated monitors, which gives you a lot of screen and
> enough height for a very large full-sized page. Its nice.
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