Signals travelling through DSUB cables experience a higher signal deterioration. Now why exactly, due to worse shielding or whatever, I'm not sure. Moderns DSUB cables might work a little better. And not going through a switchbox helps also. I'm running 1280x1024 at home through a switchbox and with the DSUB cable I get shading. With the BNC cable (still through switchbox) I get almost none. Btw... if you go BNC, get a screen where you can easily switch the input source (like through a menu select). BNC or DSUB. Very convenient. On my Philips 201P I have to walk around my desk to do that. -Armin sinck@ugive.com wrote: > \_ 19" screens have definitely the best price- performance > \_ now. 1152x864 is the sweet spot resolution > Is this the one that actually utilizes the most pixels without > actually going over the real pixel/phosphor count? Me, I could never > be happy at < 1280 on 17+. > > \_ for that screen size. So > \_ get one with at least 91KHz. A little more to ensure a little > \_ reserve. Also a good thing to ensure good image quality is to get > \_ one with BNC connectors. > > How is BNC better than the DSUB (standard VGA)?. It would seem to me > that the same basic signals have to travel on the same basic kind of > wire in the same basic insulated cable, and only the tips matter to > make sure they plug in? > > The iiyama previous referenced has both DSUB & BNC, for mix & match > fun. :-) > > David > > ________________________________________________ > See http://PLUG.phoenix.az.us/navigator-mail.shtml if your mail doesn't post to the list quickly and you use Netscape to write mail. > > Plug-discuss mailing list - Plug-discuss@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss