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Brien

macrumors 68040
Original poster
Aug 11, 2008
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Is the new iMac a sign of things to come? The rest of the line-up is still 16:10, so it is either going to be the sole "HD" display, or they are going to be revamping the Cinema Display and notebook lines again.
 
Im surprised the MacBook didnt go 16:9, but i doubt anything Pro, or the ACD will become 16:9
 
Hopefully never. Vertical space is generally much more useful in normal use than horizontal space.
 
Hopefully never. Vertical space is generally much more useful in normal use than horizontal space.

+1 on that. 16:10 is a good compromise between horizontal (facing pages) and vertical. My first thought was they were catering to "black bar" haters (playing 16:9 on 16:10). Based on my own movie collection, I'd say at least half are "wider" than 16:9 anyway. Go figure. :rolleyes:

I'll have to say the 27" does look impressive, though.
 
16:9 is bad

What's more, 4:3 should become the standard again

The place where this is most annoying is in laser TVs, which thanks to their dynamic resolution, would be ideal to watch all formats. But no, they make them 16:9, too. :mad:
 
16:9 is bad

What's more, 4:3 should become the standard again

The place where this is most annoying is in laser TVs, which thanks to their dynamic resolution, would be ideal to watch all formats. But no, they make them 16:9, too. :mad:

With a username like yours, I'd expect you to be championing a 1:1 aspect ratio :p

And god, I hope not (16:9), especially not in a laptop. It's okay for a larger screen with more vertical pixels to compensate for the loss.
 
16:9 is funny looking if you ask me. A few of my friends have Acers with that same ratio... Personally I think if Jobs got handed a 16:9 Macbook case prototype, he would scream out in a horrific fashion that would awaken Jimmy Hoffa from his unknown grave.

16:9 just makes for an overly-long computer case. For a monitor its alright, but a laptop... Everything gets spaced out too wide, if you ask me. Considering how the 27" can cater out with its exemplary video input, I would imagine that like several people have said, its for the black-bar haters who demand 1080p no matter what. On the other hand, a laptop generally will not have 1900x1080 unless its HUGE, ergo the only viable model for a change would be the 17", and I think that the change would piss off more users then the ones that would adopt it.
 
Actually, maybe it's easier to sell 1:1 screens to the dumb masses than 4:3, as it would be something new.

Then everybody can buy Hasselblads :)
 
Actually, maybe it's easier to sell 1:1 screens to the dumb masses than 4:3, as it would be something new.

Then everybody can buy Hasselblads :)

Oh yeah, because everyone wants to watch their blu-ray movies on a 1920x1920 display. Wow, imagine how many pixels are wasted on that thing.
 
Oh yeah, because everyone wants to watch their blu-ray movies on a 1920x1920 display. Wow, imagine how many pixels are wasted on that thing.

But everyone wants to watch SD content in 4:3 as big as possible.

But yes, 4:3 would be cheaper than 1:1, like 16:9 is cheaper than 16:10
 
But everyone wants to watch SD content in 4:3 as big as possible.

But yes, 4:3 would be cheaper than 1:1, like 16:9 is cheaper than 16:10

But just about all content these days are in some format wider than 4:3. Just about everything except the smaller devices like the 3GS. Consumer camcorders are in 16:9 just about.

In these cases, 4:3 would make that media look *smaller* than on a wider aspect.
 
But just about all content these days are in some format wider than 4:3. Just about everything except the smaller devices like the 3GS. Consumer camcorders are in 16:9 just about.

In these cases, 4:3 would make that media look *smaller* than on a wider aspect.

There's a TON of content in 4:3. Not only video, but also classic films that could be rereleased in Blu Ray.

And none of the pixels would we wasted on a computer monitor.

A 4:3 display doesn't make wide media look worse when it has the right amount of pixels.

And laser TVs just give you the exact number of nice pixels for all formats.
 
There's a TON of content in 4:3. Not only video, but also classic films that could be rereleased in Blu Ray.

And none of the pixels would we wasted on a computer monitor.

A 4:3 display doesn't make wide media look worse when it has the right amount of pixels.

And laser TVs just give you the exact number of nice pixels for all formats.

Yes, that's why 16:10 is a good compromise. If you're watching 4:3 content on that aspect, 16.7% of pixels are letterboxes. If you're are watching 16:9 content on a 4:3 screen, 33.3% of pixels are rendered black.

Yes, while using the screen as a computer display, I find it far more productive to be able to have documents side by side, while on a 4:3, you wouldn't be able to achieve this without some part of the screen being wasted).
 
There's never vertical waste on a computer monitor.

And IMAX is 1.43:1 (4.29:3)
 
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