They didn't tell you the real reason for the shift to widescreens - more of them can be cut from a single sheet of mother glass, so they're cheaper to make.
There are still some 4:3 screens, but as widescreen TV takes hold, they'll probably eventually disappear as people lose familiarity with them.
I agree completely. That's why I recently bought a Latitude D520 with 4:3 screen. Now I see that its successor D530 is out. You should go for this model. I actually expected Dell to phase out 4:3 models with the D520, but fortunately not as the D530 is brand new with the latest chipset. Intergrated grapics , which is fine for a work laptop. Very silent is it too. You can get it with 1024X768 or 1400X1050. For me 1024 is pefect as I can't read the small fonts in higher res
I run it with XP, although shipped with Vista. XP is much faster and more responisve and use less CPU= less noise
Err here I am... My wife watches her junk on the TV, I hook in the earphones and watch what I want. I don't have a second TV in the house. Only other place to put a second tv would be the bedroom, and I believe that room is used for 2 things, 1 is to sleep, and the 2nd ISN'T to watch TV. :smileywink:
I love the wide screens. I can keep several windows open side by side. I have a 19" wide screen monitor at work. It comes in handy when I have to work, I can see the other info as I am typing in another window. But I would suppose it's a personal preference. As far as my laptop concern, it's not a problem.
Obviously, a lot of people are buying widescreen laptops and not enough people buying regular-screen laptops, so the manufacturers are shifting to widescreen en masse. You can shout at the top of your lungs, but will you pay $100 or $200 more for a regular screen as opposed to a widescreen? If not, then the manufacturers are doing the economically right thing by making all their laptops with the cheaper-to-manufacture widescreens.
And as for me, I love widescreens. I find it easy to fit a lot more columns of my spreadsheet into the visible area of the screen instead of scrolling from side to side. Top to bottom scrolling is always easier than side-to-side scrolling, so anything that reduces the latter, even at the cost of more of the former is welcome for me.
And I watch movies on my laptop too. I can go sit wherever I want and watch movies in privacy and peace instead of jockeying with others for space and time in front of a TV. Also, any decent movie-player software should have a feature to convert a full-screen movie into wide-screen without the black bars on the side. Wide-screen is the native aspect ratio of practically all movies anyways (in fact it is wider than most laptop aspect ratios, so I have DVD's that have black bars at the top and bottom of my widescreen laptop screen), so if DVD's are still being made in full-screen format, you never know what is being cut off at the sides to make it fit old-style TV screens.
I agree 100%. I am especially frustrated with the absence of the 14.1 non-widescreen Latitudes. Yes, if you do work with spreadsheets, a widescreen can be great, but otherwise not. And the Latitudes are targeted at business users, so watching movies should not be a priority. I noticed one respondent mentions loving their 19" widescreen monitor. That is a whole different issue than a laptop screen.
I sat a 14.1 widescreen next to a 14.1 XGA side by side, and for web browsing, email, word processing, the tall screen was clearly superior for getting max information on the screen. I realize you can get the 15 inch XGA/SXGA D530, but that is big machine overall, 13 1/4 inches wide. The 14.1 widescreen D630 is also 13 1/4 inches wide.
So Dell, please, bring back a tall-screen 14.1 Latitude. My D610 is perfect dimensions, just getting a little old and slow...
ejn63
9 Legend
•
87.5K Posts
0
November 23rd, 2007 18:00
There are still some 4:3 screens, but as widescreen TV takes hold, they'll probably eventually disappear as people lose familiarity with them.
mbibt
1 Message
0
November 24th, 2007 12:00
http://www.dell.com/content/products/productdetails.aspx/latit_d530?c=us&cs=04&l=en&s=bsd&~tab=bundlestab
Message Edited by mbibt on 11-24-2007 08:58 AM
apchar
8 Posts
0
November 24th, 2007 16:00
krasev
1 Message
0
April 10th, 2008 21:00
I do... I hate those idiotic widescreen displays. That's why I have bought Latitude D530 15" XGA. It's great!
Show me the moran who watches the movies on a laptop? There is a big screen TV for this! :))))
So why do you need a widescreen display!.... to see vertical black bars? or distorted image and more distance to move mouse? Marazm!
Oditius
2 Intern
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808 Posts
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April 11th, 2008 01:00
Oditius
2 Intern
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808 Posts
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April 11th, 2008 01:00
Balaji Ramanath
1.8K Posts
0
April 11th, 2008 16:00
Obviously, a lot of people are buying widescreen laptops and not enough people buying regular-screen laptops, so the manufacturers are shifting to widescreen en masse. You can shout at the top of your lungs, but will you pay $100 or $200 more for a regular screen as opposed to a widescreen? If not, then the manufacturers are doing the economically right thing by making all their laptops with the cheaper-to-manufacture widescreens.
And as for me, I love widescreens. I find it easy to fit a lot more columns of my spreadsheet into the visible area of the screen instead of scrolling from side to side. Top to bottom scrolling is always easier than side-to-side scrolling, so anything that reduces the latter, even at the cost of more of the former is welcome for me.
And I watch movies on my laptop too. I can go sit wherever I want and watch movies in privacy and peace instead of jockeying with others for space and time in front of a TV. Also, any decent movie-player software should have a feature to convert a full-screen movie into wide-screen without the black bars on the side. Wide-screen is the native aspect ratio of practically all movies anyways (in fact it is wider than most laptop aspect ratios, so I have DVD's that have black bars at the top and bottom of my widescreen laptop screen), so if DVD's are still being made in full-screen format, you never know what is being cut off at the sides to make it fit old-style TV screens.
littledan8
1 Message
0
May 8th, 2008 22:00
I agree 100%. I am especially frustrated with the absence of the 14.1 non-widescreen Latitudes. Yes, if you do work with spreadsheets, a widescreen can be great, but otherwise not. And the Latitudes are targeted at business users, so watching movies should not be a priority. I noticed one respondent mentions loving their 19" widescreen monitor. That is a whole different issue than a laptop screen.
I sat a 14.1 widescreen next to a 14.1 XGA side by side, and for web browsing, email, word processing, the tall screen was clearly superior for getting max information on the screen. I realize you can get the 15 inch XGA/SXGA D530, but that is big machine overall, 13 1/4 inches wide. The 14.1 widescreen D630 is also 13 1/4 inches wide.
So Dell, please, bring back a tall-screen 14.1 Latitude. My D610 is perfect dimensions, just getting a little old and slow...