Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
I have been looking at upgrading my Thinkpads and have been surprised and disturbed by the apparent lack of high-res screens these days.
I have a T61p and an X61 tablet, both of which I bought a couple of years back. The T61p has a 1600x1400 display and the 12" tablet has a 1400x1050 display. I also have another 15" laptop which has a 1900x1200 display that I got a couple of years ago.
I haven't kept up with computer notebook technology over the last two years but coming back to the fray while thinking of upgrading I was assuming that the screen technology would have IMPROVED, not gone backwards. But gone backwards it apparently has. I can't imagine running a lower resolution than I currently have and by jumping two years ahead in technology I was hoping to be able to upgrade and have an even higher resolution. More fool me, apparently!
It appears that on the new 14" T series line the best resolution I can get is LESS than I currently have on my little 12 inch tablet! XGA? Huh? A standard from over 10 years ago?
It's very strange for me - I have been used to printers upping their resolution from 300x300 to 600 and now 1200 pixels per inch and beyond. It is very hard to tell the difference between 600 and 1200 when printing a document, but still the technology has improved. And yet with laptop screens, where you really CAN notice the difference between screens of different pixel density - and it is really huge - we are still stuck with a standard of XGA which as I remember was first introduced on laptops in the late 1990s!!
I can't understand this - technology has improved in every area, by leaps and bounds, and we are stuck with screens with the same resolution as 10 years ago??? Not only with printers, but it is also really strange when you compare it to the pixel increases we've seen with digital cameras. Now these have increased in leaps and bounds too since 10 years ago. I personally think increasing the pixel density in digital cameras beyond a certain point can be counter productive, since you can't see the difference in prints (unless they are very large) and the increased sensitivity to noise makes them actually produce worse pictures in many cases. But it seems manufacturers and consumers are very sensitive to pixel densities in this case, where it is a bit stupid (in my opinion) to be so obsessed, but manufacturers and consumers don't seem to care at all in the case of display screens, where it really is a big benefit to have higher densities - at least higher densities than those we had 10 years ago.
What is going on??? Is there a conspiracy by laptop manufacturers because higher resolution screens are too expensive/troublesome to develop? Are we as consumers just dumb and follow whatever manufacturers tell us to buy and not think/buy for ourselves?
I think I am keeping my T61p and my X61 tablet after all.
I have a T61p and an X61 tablet, both of which I bought a couple of years back. The T61p has a 1600x1400 display and the 12" tablet has a 1400x1050 display. I also have another 15" laptop which has a 1900x1200 display that I got a couple of years ago.
I haven't kept up with computer notebook technology over the last two years but coming back to the fray while thinking of upgrading I was assuming that the screen technology would have IMPROVED, not gone backwards. But gone backwards it apparently has. I can't imagine running a lower resolution than I currently have and by jumping two years ahead in technology I was hoping to be able to upgrade and have an even higher resolution. More fool me, apparently!
It appears that on the new 14" T series line the best resolution I can get is LESS than I currently have on my little 12 inch tablet! XGA? Huh? A standard from over 10 years ago?
It's very strange for me - I have been used to printers upping their resolution from 300x300 to 600 and now 1200 pixels per inch and beyond. It is very hard to tell the difference between 600 and 1200 when printing a document, but still the technology has improved. And yet with laptop screens, where you really CAN notice the difference between screens of different pixel density - and it is really huge - we are still stuck with a standard of XGA which as I remember was first introduced on laptops in the late 1990s!!
I can't understand this - technology has improved in every area, by leaps and bounds, and we are stuck with screens with the same resolution as 10 years ago??? Not only with printers, but it is also really strange when you compare it to the pixel increases we've seen with digital cameras. Now these have increased in leaps and bounds too since 10 years ago. I personally think increasing the pixel density in digital cameras beyond a certain point can be counter productive, since you can't see the difference in prints (unless they are very large) and the increased sensitivity to noise makes them actually produce worse pictures in many cases. But it seems manufacturers and consumers are very sensitive to pixel densities in this case, where it is a bit stupid (in my opinion) to be so obsessed, but manufacturers and consumers don't seem to care at all in the case of display screens, where it really is a big benefit to have higher densities - at least higher densities than those we had 10 years ago.
What is going on??? Is there a conspiracy by laptop manufacturers because higher resolution screens are too expensive/troublesome to develop? Are we as consumers just dumb and follow whatever manufacturers tell us to buy and not think/buy for ourselves?
I think I am keeping my T61p and my X61 tablet after all.
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
First thing I think of is that lower resolution is cheaper to manufacture, and offering lower priced products is the current trend. There are still high end, high res., high dollar systems available.
Second thing is, when you get to my age, eye sight starts to go. I like the desktop area of a high resolution screen, but I can't see well enough to utilize it, without wearing reading glasses (which I find uncomfortable). I'm using a 14.1" XGA Thinkpad right now, and find that the screen resolution is just about right for my eyes.
Seems to me, there are plenty of choices available these days. Anyone should be able to find a laptop that fits there needs.
Second thing is, when you get to my age, eye sight starts to go. I like the desktop area of a high resolution screen, but I can't see well enough to utilize it, without wearing reading glasses (which I find uncomfortable). I'm using a 14.1" XGA Thinkpad right now, and find that the screen resolution is just about right for my eyes.
Seems to me, there are plenty of choices available these days. Anyone should be able to find a laptop that fits there needs.
Collection = T500 - R400 - X300 - X200 - T61 (14" WXGA+) - T61 (14.1" SXGA+) - T60 (15" SXGA+) - X40 - T43p - T43 - T42p - A30P - 600E
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
You can get the W500 with WUXGA, but no luck with the tablets. It's too high for me.
E7440
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
Some X200s models have 12.1" WXGA+ (1440*900) panels. Although the resolution for the X200s models is different from your X61 tablet PC, the difference in pixel density between the models is not that big. An X200s with a 12.1" WXGA+ panel has 140 PPI compared to 145 PPI in a X61 Tablet with a 12.1" SXGA+ panel. The T400 series has models with 14,1" WXGA+ (1440*900) panels. The pixel density is 120 PPI, which is significantly higher than 14.1" XGA panels (91 PPI).
Last edited by TTY on Wed Jul 28, 2010 5:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
Come again - 1600x1400? I think you are mistaken, such a screen resolution doesn't exist. The highest resolution for a 14" T61p was 1400x1050, and for a 15.4" wide - 1920x1200.noetus wrote:I have a T61p and an X61 tablet, both of which I bought a couple of years back. The T61p has a 1600x1400 display and the 12" tablet has a 1400x1050 display. I also have another 15" laptop which has a 1900x1200 display that I got a couple of years ago.
So to you advances in screen technology come down to increasing resolution? Well, then allow me to disappoint you - you are stuck. Resolution is not going to increase. And it's not because it's technologically hard to do. It's just because you can only increase the resolution (and consequently, the PPI) so much before it becomes impractical due to unreadably small print at the standard font size settings. As long as the operating systems foolishly continue to render fonts using pixels and not absolute units like centimeters, increasing resolution beyond a certain practical limit = small text = eyestrain = totally unusable for some people. Heck, to me even 12" SXGA+ would be bordering on too small, although I love my 14"/15" SXGA+ screens.noetus wrote:I haven't kept up with computer notebook technology over the last two years but coming back to the fray while thinking of upgrading I was assuming that the screen technology would have IMPROVED, not gone backwards. But gone backwards it apparently has. I can't imagine running a lower resolution than I currently have and by jumping two years ahead in technology I was hoping to be able to upgrade and have an even higher resolution. More fool me, apparently!
Where are you getting your specs exactly?noetus wrote:It appears that on the new 14" T series line the best resolution I can get is LESS than I currently have on my little 12 inch tablet! XGA? Huh? A standard from over 10 years ago?
That is because the way printers work is fundamentally different. Or actually it's more like truetype-font applications, such as Word/Adobe, which render text based on absolute units. In such applications, the size of the text depends only on the size of the screen, not the resolution, and so higher resolution will only contribute by making the text sharper, less pixelated. Same with printers. Not same with standard UI elements, basic text-based IDEs, web browsers, etc.noetus wrote:It's very strange for me - I have been used to printers upping their resolution from 300x300 to 600 and now 1200 pixels per inch and beyond. It is very hard to tell the difference between 600 and 1200 when printing a document, but still the technology has improved.
The problem is that, again, because of the fundamental flaw in the way operating system render UI elements, you cannot say that higher pixel densities bring only benefits. For most people doing average tasks, low-average resolutions are sufficient, and higher resolutions bring very little advantage, and some very noticeable inconvenience.noetus wrote:But it seems manufacturers and consumers are very sensitive to pixel densities in this case, where it is a bit stupid (in my opinion) to be so obsessed, but manufacturers and consumers don't seem to care at all in the case of display screens, where it really is a big benefit to have higher densities - at least higher densities than those we had 10 years ago.
I myself consider myself to sit well in the middle. I don't like low-res screens like XGA and WXGA, but at the same time I would stay shy of the super high-res screens as well. My comfort level is probably around 100DPI for desktop LCDs (UXGA on 20") and 125DPI for laptops (SXGA+ on 14"), although I could probably go as high as 110DPI for desktops (if they existed) and 135 for laptops (UXGA on 15").
Current: X220 4291-4BG, T410 2537-R46, T60 1952-F76, T60 2007-QPG, T42 2373-F7G
Collectibles: T430s (IPS FHD + Classic Keyboard), X32 (IPS Screen)
Retired: X61 7673-V2V, A31p w/ Ultrabay Numpad
Past: Z61t 9440-A23, T60 2623-D3U, X32 2884-M5U
Collectibles: T430s (IPS FHD + Classic Keyboard), X32 (IPS Screen)
Retired: X61 7673-V2V, A31p w/ Ultrabay Numpad
Past: Z61t 9440-A23, T60 2623-D3U, X32 2884-M5U
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
One of my co-workers just got a Blackberry Curve which has 320x240 in a 2.5" screen. He loves its crispness. I don't know how many PPI that is, but scaled up to 15" it would be 1920*1440. The new Nokia N900 internet tablet will have 800x480 in a 3.5" screen. That's even more ppi. It's widescreen format but looks like it would scale to 3428x2057 at 15". More dpi is good, the obstacle to it is cost, power consumption, and the cpu and video bandwidth needed to drive that many pixels. Even the 2560x1600 displays need dual link dvi instead of regular dvi.
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
Again, you are talking about devices that obviously do not run standard operating systems and standard text-based UI applications. I dare you to run standard Windows on the N900 and claim that it is just as usable as, say, on the original ASUS EEE (which has the same resolution on an 8.9" screen).phr wrote:One of my co-workers just got a Blackberry Curve which has 320x240 in a 2.5" screen. He loves its crispness. I don't know how many PPI that is, but scaled up to 15" it would be 1920*1440. The new Nokia N900 internet tablet will have 800x480 in a 3.5" screen. That's even more ppi.
Current: X220 4291-4BG, T410 2537-R46, T60 1952-F76, T60 2007-QPG, T42 2373-F7G
Collectibles: T430s (IPS FHD + Classic Keyboard), X32 (IPS Screen)
Retired: X61 7673-V2V, A31p w/ Ultrabay Numpad
Past: Z61t 9440-A23, T60 2623-D3U, X32 2884-M5U
Collectibles: T430s (IPS FHD + Classic Keyboard), X32 (IPS Screen)
Retired: X61 7673-V2V, A31p w/ Ultrabay Numpad
Past: Z61t 9440-A23, T60 2623-D3U, X32 2884-M5U
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SaberX
- ThinkPadder

- Posts: 1042
- Joined: Sat Jun 04, 2005 6:22 am
- Location: St John's , Newfoundland , Canada
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
The cheap Nokia 6275i cell phone i have has a 320x240 lcd in a (i think)a 1.8" screen size.Nice clear , sharp pic.phr wrote:One of my co-workers just got a Blackberry Curve which has 320x240 in a 2.5" screen. He loves its crispness. I don't know how many PPI that is, but scaled up to 15" it would be 1920*1440. The new Nokia N900 internet tablet will have 800x480 in a 3.5" screen. That's even more ppi. It's widescreen format but looks like it would scale to 3428x2057 at 15". More dpi is good, the obstacle to it is cost, power consumption, and the cpu and video bandwidth needed to drive that many pixels. Even the 2560x1600 displays need dual link dvi instead of regular dvi.
Bill Wheeler
Great White North
Thinkpad T500 , T60p
[Donor]
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
I am also disappointed in the displays offered these days. I love my 14.1" SXGA+ display on my T42. Sadly that resolution is no longer available on the newer models.
Regarding font size, there are several methods to increase it. In Windows XP I set the display to render fonts at 111%. I have also used the option in the Opera browser to set a minimum font size of 12 pixels.
Regarding font size, there are several methods to increase it. In Windows XP I set the display to render fonts at 111%. I have also used the option in the Opera browser to set a minimum font size of 12 pixels.
DKB
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Zender
- Junior Member

- Posts: 315
- Joined: Sun Mar 18, 2007 8:34 pm
- Location: Prague, Czech Republic
- Contact:
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
There's one good thing about it, at least for me. With no 14" SXGA+ around, my urge to get a new laptop is very much cooled off 
T60 14" SXGA+ 9c T5600 3GB X1400 4965AGN MC8780 IR BT FPR DVDRW Alps XPP
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
Three months on, I'm very happy with the 12.1" 1440x900 display in my X200s. I still find that the wide-screen aspect ratio is not used as effectively by many applications (web browsing, word processing etc) but the screen is very bright and very crisp. With the 120 dpi display settings (rather than the 96 dpi default) the UI elements and fonts are quite a reasonable size, even for my no-longer-very-good eyes.
X220 (4287-2W5, Windows 8 Pro) / X31 (2672-CXU, XP Pro) / X61s (7668-CTO, Windows 8 Pro)
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
[quote="dr_st"][quote="phr"]One of my co-workers just got a Blackberry Curve which has 320x240 in a 2.5" screen. He loves its crispness. I don't know how many PPI that is, but scaled up to 15" it would be 1920*1440. The new Nokia N900 internet tablet will have 800x480 in a 3.5" screen. That's even more ppi.[/quote]Again, you are talking about devices that obviously do not run standard operating systems and standard text-based UI applications. I dare you to run standard Windows on the N900 and claim that it is just as usable as, say, on the original ASUS EEE (which has the same resolution on an 8.9" screen).[/quote]
As a Linux user I don't have any interest in running Windows on the N900 or on any other machine. If Windows doesn't have enough font flexibility to let you configure good readable fonts on a 150 (or higher) dpi screen, that's a problem with Windows, not a problem with the screen. Get on the phone with Microsoft and tell them to fix the problem
As a Linux user I don't have any interest in running Windows on the N900 or on any other machine. If Windows doesn't have enough font flexibility to let you configure good readable fonts on a 150 (or higher) dpi screen, that's a problem with Windows, not a problem with the screen. Get on the phone with Microsoft and tell them to fix the problem
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mattbiernat
- ThinkPadder

- Posts: 1621
- Joined: Sun Aug 27, 2006 12:18 pm
- Location: Brooklyn, NY
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
because people like me are going blind.... sorry i couldn't helpnoetus wrote:Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
Yeah, me too. : (mattbiernat wrote:because people like me are going blind.... sorry i couldn't help
And yet I have this crazy X200s and now also working on a T61 at 1400x1050. My poor eyes ...
X220 (4287-2W5, Windows 8 Pro) / X31 (2672-CXU, XP Pro) / X61s (7668-CTO, Windows 8 Pro)
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
Yeah, I like the nice 115 PPI on my 15" SXGA+ R60. It's not too small or too big.
E7440
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
While I do miss the SXGA resolution of my older T41p (now gone), on my 15" T60 XGA is quite nice. It doesn't strain my eyes and looks pretty good. That being said I still want to upgrade the LCD to SXGA because I am 34 and my eyes are still working within design specs. I won't upgrade the LCD on the unit until I get a planar with a real GPU as I am currently using the Intel GPU and while decent, it leaves me wanting.
New:
Thinkpad T430s 8GB DDR3, 1600x900, 128GB + 250GB SSD's, etc.
Old:
E6520, Precision M4400, D630, Latitude E6520
ThinkPad Tablet 16GB 1838-22U
IBM Thinkpad X61T, T61, T43, X41T, T60, T41P, T42, T410, X301
Thinkpad T430s 8GB DDR3, 1600x900, 128GB + 250GB SSD's, etc.
Old:
E6520, Precision M4400, D630, Latitude E6520
ThinkPad Tablet 16GB 1838-22U
IBM Thinkpad X61T, T61, T43, X41T, T60, T41P, T42, T410, X301
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
Higher resolutions on notebooks were the worst idea I've ever come across: What's the purpose of increasing resolution when the screen size doesn't? I would already need a bloody magnifier on my T400 if Windows didn't allow me to increase font-DPI. In fact, the new option for the new continous DPI-scaling is what I appreciate Windows 7 the most for.
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Puppy
- Senior ThinkPadder

- Posts: 2264
- Joined: Sat Oct 30, 2004 4:52 am
- Location: Prague, Czech Republic
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
Useability. I need to display as high as possible amount of text on the screen. The more visible lines of text, the higher resolution, the better.Karakasa wrote:What's the purpose of increasing resolution when the screen size doesn't?
ThinkPad (1992 - 2012): R51, X31, X220, Tablet 8
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
I love the screen on the X61t: 1400x1050 in a 12" IPS screen. It's not very bright, but indoors it is absolutely fabulous.
X61 Tablet - 1.6GHz C2D, SXGA+, 1GB RAM, 100GB HD, Vista Business.
i have other laptops but i'll be honest i never use 'em
i have other laptops but i'll be honest i never use 'em
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
It is to protect your eyes. There is alway to increase font size in every OS or APPKarakasa wrote:Higher resolutions on notebooks were the worst idea I've ever come across: What's the purpose of increasing resolution when the screen size doesn't? ....
Text display with smooth edges saves your eyes, that's also valid for big text on
laptop screens, as the screen will always stay near to your eyes.
The display of my 133dpi 1600x1200 UXGA screens is so brilliant, that can't go back to any of
those crappy TN LCD in current laptop models. You just constantly realize the drop in display quality.
Lophiomys
Thinkpads with 15inch 4:3 UXGA 133DPI IPS/Flexview: 2x T43p SATA Mod., 3x T42p (dying by Flexing), 2x T60p (1xATI, 1xIntel/new BoeHydis);
R51 SXGA+; X31; X41T; X41 Sata Mod; all Made in China; 570E, 701C; MBP15c3UB non-glossy mid09 / formerly 600X, 760E
Thinkpads with 15inch 4:3 UXGA 133DPI IPS/Flexview: 2x T43p SATA Mod., 3x T42p (dying by Flexing), 2x T60p (1xATI, 1xIntel/new BoeHydis);
R51 SXGA+; X31; X41T; X41 Sata Mod; all Made in China; 570E, 701C; MBP15c3UB non-glossy mid09 / formerly 600X, 760E
Re: Why are all the new models with lo-res screens these days?
Which never works with 100% success, and sometimes is downright unsatisfactory. And once you start struggling with it, your choice is either to limit usability or to stay with tiny text, which at some point becomes too tiny to help, and actually increases eye strain.lophiomys wrote:It is to protect your eyes. There is alway to increase font size in every OS or APP
Text display with smooth edges saves your eyes, that's also valid for big text on
laptop screens, as the screen will always stay near to your eyes.
This has more to do with IPS vs TN, than with the DPI. Otherwise, the WUXGA 15.4" panels would rock the world.lophiomys wrote:The display of my 133dpi 1600x1200 UXGA screens is so brilliant, that can't go back to any of
those crappy TN LCD in current laptop models. You just constantly realize the drop in display quality.
Current: X220 4291-4BG, T410 2537-R46, T60 1952-F76, T60 2007-QPG, T42 2373-F7G
Collectibles: T430s (IPS FHD + Classic Keyboard), X32 (IPS Screen)
Retired: X61 7673-V2V, A31p w/ Ultrabay Numpad
Past: Z61t 9440-A23, T60 2623-D3U, X32 2884-M5U
Collectibles: T430s (IPS FHD + Classic Keyboard), X32 (IPS Screen)
Retired: X61 7673-V2V, A31p w/ Ultrabay Numpad
Past: Z61t 9440-A23, T60 2623-D3U, X32 2884-M5U
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