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Originally posted by Calgary Flames+Mar 9 2005, 09:24 PM--></div><table border='0' align='center' width='95%' cellpadding='3' cellspacing='1'><tr><td>QUOTE (Calgary Flames @ Mar 9 2005, 09:24 PM)</td></tr><tr><td id='QUOTE'>
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Originally posted by hulkrogan@Mar 9 2005, 03:15 PM
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Originally posted by Calgary Flames@Mar 9 2005, 03:11 PM
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Originally posted by hulkrogan@Mar 9 2005, 11:34 AM
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@Mar 8 2005, 11:00 PM
The rainbow effect is the color wheel that you see.# You won't see it unless you move your eyeballs right to left very quick all the time, I sure don't watch tv that way.# Good choice on TV.# DLP is the way to go for quality, color, brightness long term life.# It also uses a user replaceable lamp, so you don't have to worry about# paying to get it service.# There are no pixels to burnout like LCD.# There is no burn in, like LCD and plasma.# And it can be fixed, unlike plasma.# I don't understand why anyone would buy a plasma or lcd (unless space is the biggest problem).#
I have a 46" Samsung DLP and love it.
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Once again, LCD's DO NOT burn in.
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LCD's do burn in, at least with my experiences with PC monitors.
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I work on a laptop, and have for well over a year. Why don't I have the start button burned into my monitor?
Infact show me any laptop or LCD computer monitor made in the last couple years and i'll eat my words.
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I'm using a laptop. I had burn in. Not a huge ammount of it, in fact VERY faint. But my warrenty was running out and I sent it to HP to be replaced for free. I was also using a pretty bright XP skin that seemed to be the direct cause of it.
Considering the ammount i've used it over that year, the faint burn in wasn't bad at all. [/b][/quote]
Your problem my friend, is that you bought an HP, the biggest piece of shinguard in the technology world. I have a Dell Inspiron 5100 and I leave it on 21 hours per day with no screensaver and after 2.5 years it has zero burn in and and screen is as good as new.