CAN I BE OF ASSISTANCE?
Saturday, February 28
Periwinkle And Bistre
The llamas' names are Periwinkle and Bistre.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
10:55 PM
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Posted by: Steven Den Beste at Sunday, March 01 2015 01:12 AM (+rSRq)
2
The llamas are news because one of them flew to a private island where a bunch of cria were being abused, right?
Posted by: Ken in NH at Monday, March 02 2015 06:57 AM (0Y1hO)
3
Because one of them was white and gold and the other was blue and black...
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Monday, March 02 2015 02:30 PM (2yngH)
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Thellma and Llouise is very good though. My hat's off to Steven Hayward for that one.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Monday, March 02 2015 02:31 PM (2yngH)
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That wasn't actually Hayward's joke; it's just a cartoon he collected and reposted. But it's still pretty good.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at Tuesday, March 03 2015 04:27 AM (+rSRq)
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Are the llamas butts being kicked?
Posted by: Wonderduck at Wednesday, March 04 2015 11:38 AM (jGQR+)
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When Chrome's Sixty-Four
Well, no crashes in a week. The problem seems to be isolated to Chrome 40.0.2214.115 32-bit with hardware acceleration enabled, plus something specific about my combination of Windows, my Radeon HD 7950, and its drivers and / or firmware.
This started (near as I can tell) when Chrome updated itself, and stopped when I turned off hardware acceleration. After updating to 64-bit Chrome and having a couple of days of stable operation, I turned hardware acceleration back on - and I've had another couple of days of stability.
Which is good, because this is my primary machine for work, and I typically have about 15 apps and a total of 100 tabs open at any given time, not to mention a couple of Linux virtual machines each with their own sets of applications.*
Having it crash every day is like trying to build a house when once a day, bam, all your tools and supplies and whatever you were working on in the last hour suddenly scatter themselves all over the lot. The fact that nothing is broken and you can pick everything up and start again is beside the point; sooner or later you are going to say to hell with this and take up a job farming potatoes.
* That's why I bought a system with 8 cores, 32GB of RAM, and a 960GB SSD. The Radeon 7950, though, that was for Mass Effect.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
10:51 PM
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1
I've noticed some rendering artifacts in Chrome, some very severe, on a few ad laden sites recently. Then, poof, the rendering artifacts have disappeared. I wasn't sure if it was the ads, the site itself or Chrome that was corrected. Given your problems, I'm starting to suspect Chrome.
Posted by: Ken in NH at Monday, March 02 2015 06:54 AM (0Y1hO)
2
Chrome messes up Instapundit if you have scaling enabled - which I do, since I have a 4K monitor now. Not badly, but it's obviously wrong and works fine in Firefox.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Monday, March 02 2015 02:32 PM (2yngH)
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Monday, February 23
A Farewell To Chromes?
TL;DR: It seems that some combination of 32-bit Chrome 40.0.2214.115, Chrome's hardware-accelerated rendering, AMD's graphics drivers, and perhaps my early model HD7950 BIOS had my computer crashing constantly last week. I turned off Chrome's hardware acceleration and installed the 64-bit version, and it seems to be stable now. Even loading up 16GB worth of tabs (one of the pages of this blog uses 1GB, which is handy to know but painful to trip over) and then closing the whole window at once didn't faze it.
I've been using Kei (my new PC) since January 2 (though the individual components are a lot older than that). For six weeks it ran fine (ignoring all the reboots for updates), but then last Monday I arrived home from work to find that it had crashed.
Tuesday, it crashed again.
Wednesday it crashed again.
Thursday it didn't crash.
Friday it crashed twice.
Saturday it crashed when I wasn't even using it.
Sunday it crashed.
And so today, before I left for work, I fed it a CD containing Memtest86 and left it to run.
Got home just now, and it had completed 3 test cycles with no errors. (It takes quite a while to run the full test suite across 32GB of RAM.)
That's a relief. The predecessor to this computer's predecessor - Haruhi - had memory problems and slowly corrupted the contents of its disks over the course of several months; I ended up having to replace the memory and do a complete reinstall of Windows and every application. Almost anything is better than faulty memory.
It randomly freezes solid, sometimes leaving half the screen blue. No BSOD, doesn't reboot, just locks up solid. At least twice when I was closing tabs in Chrome.
Google Google....
Other people have reported issues with Chrome acceleration on Radeon graphics cards. I haven't done any hardware changes since I got the darn thing to boot, and I haven't done any software or driver updates recently, but Chrome updates itself all the time.
At least two of the crashes happened when I was interacting with Chrome. I always have Chrome running; it's my primary browser, and I use it for mail as well. Closing a tab has two main effects: It frees up a ton of memory (pointing to a possible memory issue) and it clears out a hardware accelerated graphics context.
If the memory is reliable enough to sustain a 12-hour torture test without a single bit out of place (which it should be, of course) then it's extremely unlikely to be the cause of so many crashes.
Which leaves...
Et tu, Chromium?*
You might want to get that looked at...
* Chromium comes from chroma, which is Greek, not Latin, so I have not the faintest clue what declension it is or what form it takes for the vocative case, and more to the point, nor does anyone else.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
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I don't even know what "vocative" means!
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at Tuesday, February 24 2015 03:05 AM (+rSRq)
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"vocative" from the latin "voca" which references "living la vida voca" and "tive" which means nothing at all.
Thus, "vocative" -- an annoying latin song about nothing (useful) at all.
Posted by: kurt duncan at Saturday, March 07 2015 08:06 AM (QKmzp)
3
A vocative case therefore, is the record album cover containing said song. And with that, I need to refill my flagon of korean soju and continue spamming my favorite sites with silliness. Except Chizumatic, of course. That one is for serious stuff only. And fan service. Mostly fan service.
Posted by: kurt duncan at Saturday, March 07 2015 08:07 AM (QKmzp)
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Sunday, February 22
Best Version Number Ever
I learned something new about USB 3.1 today.
The major points to know about this new version of USB are as follows:
- It runs at 10Gb per second, up from 5Gb for USB 3.0.
- It supports a new connector, USB type C, which is compact, reversible and the same on both ends of the cable.
- It supports as much as 100W of power (5A at 20V) so you can charge not just a phone or tablet, but a good-sized notebook.
- It's backwards-compatible with all the old versions; at most you'll need an adaptor cable.
- It can carry video signals like DisplayPort for resolutions up to 8K (7680x4320).
The new point is a little less significant, but still nice. USB 3.0 uses what is known as 8b/10b encoding. To send 8 bits of data over the bus, you encode it in a 10-bit pattern. This is a more sophisticated form of the start bit / stop bit / parity on old serial connections. But it does mean that 20% of the bandwidth is used up by the encoding.
USB 3.1 supports a much longer and hence more efficient pattern - it encodes 128 bits of data in a 132-bit pattern. That improves efficiency from 80% to 97%.
In effect, USB 3.0 can transfer 500MB of data per second before protocols and error correction. USB 3.1 can transfer 1200MB per second.
Which makes it fully twice as fast as SATA 3, and offers a much smaller connector than the hideous SATA Express. Plus one cable carries both data and power. Plus it's easy to create a USB hub to get more ports.
I'd like to see internal drives switch entirely over to USB 3.1, with the exception of PCIe x4 M.2 cards with NVMe.
Video is not as cut-and-dried; USB 3.1 can carry a DisplayPort 1.3 signal, which is the highest-speed consumer video standard - but only over a 1 metre cable, which just isn't enough to be practical. It can carry DisplayPort 1.2 for 2 metres, but that limits you to "only" 4K@60Hz. So DisplayPort / Thunderbolt cables still have a role there.
DisplayPort 1.3 has been designed to carry USB 3.0 in addition to video, though, so you still get USB everywhere.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
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Thursday, February 19
Say No To Lenovo
I was thinking of getting a Lenovo notebook before I settled on the LG, since Lenovo and Apple are the only major manufacturers that still offer any build-to-order options in Australia.
The adware is bad. The self-signed root certificates are downright criminal. They mean that unless you install Firefox (which ignores any existing certificates and installs its own) the certificate owner can do... Basically, whatever the hell they want. You have no security and no privacy at all. Even if you trust the companies involved - and they are obviously untrustworthy for doing this in the first place - it
leaves you open to a third-party attack.
That's it as far as I'm concerned. I'll never look at another Lenovo product, never recommend them, and warn people away if they ask.
Their non-excuses and non-apologies just turn it into a black comedy. It's like being caught substituting ground-up diseased cockroaches for coffee, and putting a stop to the practice until you can find a source of disease-free cockroaches.
Update: The only tiny sliver of protection remaining was that the passphrase for the private key wasn't known. But that was hours ago, and it's now been found. Thanks Lenovo!
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
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I'm still holding a grudge against Sony. It sounds like Lenovo gets to join them on my list.
Posted by: Ken in NH at Thursday, February 19 2015 11:02 PM (0Y1hO)
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I've been reading about this Superfish thing, and it's really a trainwreck. It opens the doors wide for anyone who wants to do anything at all to the computer.
And if you follow Lenovo's instructions for uninstalling Superfish, it leaves that damned security certificate in place, which means the doors are still wide open. This is worse than the Sony root-kit...
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at Friday, February 20 2015 06:04 AM (+rSRq)
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According to Ars, Superfish could sometimes get its cert installed in the Firefox store as well. It wasn't guaranteed to happen, but there were instances of it occurring.
Posted by: ReallyBored at Saturday, February 21 2015 01:47 AM (ulGxe)
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I don't use Windows, so neener neeener. Wait, I do use pre-installed Android on tablets, which is just as bad.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Saturday, February 21 2015 06:49 AM (RqRa5)
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Sunday, February 15
Could Be Worse. How? Could Be Raining.
Most people have a story to tell when they find themselves passed out on the bathroom floor in a puddle of their own vomit. Even if they can't remember it.
Me, nope. Dinner at home, listening to Ace of Spades podcast, start to feel really sick, run for bathroom [TMI elided] then the food poisoning (if that's what it was) brings on a migraine as a special guest star and I find I can't stand up any more, or even sit up, and lying down on a floor that I've just thrown up on actually starts to look like a good option.
Then I pass out for a while.
And, in extra bonus this-is-my-life-now news, my neighbours are making so much noise (at some time after 10 at night, and they've been carrying on like this since 8:30 this morning) that they wake me up. Food poisoning, migraine, massive sleep deficit due to recent rush jobs at work, comatose on the bathroom floor, and they wake me up.
No idea what it was. My first thought was scombroid poisoning, but unless turkey has been reclassified as fish, that's impossible. Very rapid onset, almost equally rapid recovery.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
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1
Sounds like Salmonella. It ain't fun.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at Sunday, February 15 2015 01:38 AM (+rSRq)
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I had Salmonella once, and you're right, it's not a lot of fun. This felt markedly different, though - I didn't go into a list of symptoms, but they included tingling in my hands and feet, severe dizziness, and sweating like a pig in a boiler room.
The symptoms match a couple of different types of fish-borne illnesses very closely, but turkeys ain't fish, so I don't know what the hell it was. Just happy that it seems to be over.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Sunday, February 15 2015 02:14 AM (PiXy!)
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Stomach flu? I had a dose three years ago, the tingling/dizziness/sweating sounds a lot like how I felt at points during The Event. Lasted about 18 hours more or less, took a couple of days to get over completely. No migraine, thankfully, but there was a point around 4am that I felt like I was going to die... and I didn't care.
Posted by: Wonderduck at Sunday, February 15 2015 06:09 AM (jGQR+)
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I don't think norovirus causes tingling in the hands and feet like that. I wonder if you got a small dose of botulism?
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at Sunday, February 15 2015 09:03 AM (+rSRq)
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6
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Posted by: Ken in NH at Tuesday, February 17 2015 02:39 AM (MqjGP)
7
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Monday, February 09
I'm Gonna Sing The Doom Song Now
Google News search for
Greece is doomed.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
04:10 PM
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1
If you put it in quotes, you only get 41 hits.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at Monday, February 09 2015 04:41 PM (+rSRq)
2
Shush, you.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Monday, February 09 2015 05:57 PM (PiXy!)
3
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Saturday, January 24
On Being The Wrong Size
There's a problem with the
Lord of the Rings and
Hobbit movies: The scale doesn't make sense. Little things, like the fact that the town of Dale is about as big as Minas Tirith. And big things like the dwarves' attempt to drown Smaug in molten gold.
If we assume that the volume of molten gold is about the same as an Olympic swimming pool (and frankly, it looks larger), then we're talking about 2.5 million litres of gold. That would weigh close to 50 thousand tons - 50 billion grams. Gold in our world is currently runs about $40 per gram.
That's two trillion dollars worth of gold right there. And never mind the hoard itself, which is much larger.
It's possible that gold is more common in Middle Earth than on Earth, but that just means it's less valuable, since it has little practical use in a pre-industrial economy. (It doesn't corrode, which is good, but it's soft and very heavy.)
And the dwarves pay Bard in silver, not in gold, and yet that is enough for him to risk his life to smuggle them into Esgaroth. Either the values of silver and gold are inverted - in which case the dwarves wouldn't be hoarding gold - or the economy of Middle Earth is bigger than Earth's - which isn't possible; they have nothing we'd even recognise as a city in the modern sense.
Of course, this particular part is Peter Jackson, not Tolkien, and The Hobbit is a children's story (and canonically, is told by Bilbo, who is not an entirely reliable narrator).
Still... Where is everybody in the Lord of the Rings movies? The world seems to be utterly depopulated. It's the movie equivalent of a Bioware game.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
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1
The gold hoard is actually a Dwarven mine tailings pit?
Posted by: Mauser at Saturday, January 24 2015 05:47 PM (TJ7ih)
2
They're mining for iron and dammit, more of that useless yellow crap?
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Saturday, January 24 2015 11:56 PM (PiXy!)
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The fight with Smaug really pissed me off, Jackson just pulled that one out of someplace dark and stinky. Made no sense at all, either technically, or in terms of the book's plot.
As for where everybody is, in the Lord of the Rings, I think it's worth remembering that the Fellowship were actively avoiding populated areas, because the spies of Mordor were known to be all over the place, and the last thing they wanted was for Sauron to get wind of what they were up to. That was quite explicit in the books.
Posted by: Brett Bellmore at Sunday, January 25 2015 05:18 AM (L5yWw)
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A good point. Also, the area between Minas Tirith and Mordor
would have been depopulated; Minas Ithil was taken and Osgiliath destroyed, so there wasn't much reason to hang around. Looking at the map (for the first time in a long while), almost all of Gondor lay south and east of the capital.
So Jackson got that one pretty much right.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Sunday, January 25 2015 04:24 PM (2yngH)
5
South and
west, that is. Mordor is to the east.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Sunday, January 25 2015 04:42 PM (2yngH)
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In the books, Middle Earth is fairly depopulated, partly due to the previous war against Sauron and partly the whole raids by goblins and orks and trolls and 'evil men' thing.
The other thing is that the whole continent survives on medieval era tech which doesn't allow that many big cities, there isn't enough food. Which raises the question, how many elves are there in Rivendel and where do they get their food from? Imports from Bree and the Shire?
Posted by: Rikto at Monday, January 26 2015 09:36 AM (zDlKl)
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Also I hate 80-90% of the 2nd hobbit film. I'm glad I haven't had to watch the 3rd.
Posted by: Riktol at Monday, January 26 2015 09:37 AM (zDlKl)
8
Pixy, bug report. The HTML editor works fine in Firefox 34.0.5 but it doesn't work in IE 11 (11.0.9600.17501).
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at Wednesday, February 04 2015 02:38 PM (+rSRq)
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Wednesday, January 21
Samsung U28D590D Review
TL;DR: Oh my God, it's full of stars.
Tech Specs
Resolution: 3840x2160
Input: 1 x DisplayPort 1.2, 2 x HDMI 1.4
Output: 1/8" audio jack
Power: External power brick
The
Samsung U28D590D is a 1.5th generation 4K monitor. Early 4K screens were targeted squarely at the professional market, with prices upwards of $3000. Second generation 4K screens, showing up now, are priced under $1000, still use high-quality IPS panels, but forego some high-end features like colour calibration.
The U28 sits below those, as a high-end consumer model, for consuming rather than producing high-resolution content. And it's priced appropriately; I paid A$499 for mine on sale; regular online prices range upwards from $549 to $699.
Out of the box it takes a few minutes to attache the stand (you'll need a large-bladed screwdriver, either plus or minus) and get it plugged in. The default settings are retina-searingly bright; I have the brightness and contrast turned down to 60 currently and it's still on the bright side.
This is a subjective review; I have no measurement equipment. But there are no static colour or brightness inconsistencies significant enough to notice (and there were on my old Dell U2711, a professional monitor), and no visible dead or stuck pixels (though at 4K they might not be easy to find).
Colours are vibrant and text is very sharp. It's not quite perfect - I'm judging it against my 2560x1600 Nexus 10 - but it's very good indeed.
The stand isn't as solid as it could be, particularly compared to the Dell, which is rock steady. I'd feel comfortable leaning on the Dell if I needed to climb on the desk to change the light bulb (and have); I'd never do that with this monitor.
This is a TN panel, so there is going to be some colour shift if you view it from an angle. Good news is that the horizontal viewing angle is as good as any monitor I've seen, including expensive IPS screens. Bad news is that if you stand up and look down at a 45 degree angle, white turns to blue-grey and other colours take on a distinct blue shift.
Both my desktop with its Radeon 7950 and my notebook with its Intel integrated graphics (Haswell CPU) recognised the monitor immediately and worked flawlessly over HDMI, albeit at 30Hz. What didn't work so well was connecting my 7950 over DisplayPort.
On one of the two mini-DisplayPort outputs on the card, the display shows graphical glitches on random horizontal bands every 10-30 seconds. On the other port, the whole screen goes black and then restores itself every 20-60 seconds.
Adjusting the resolution to 2560x1440 stops the problem, but that doesn't look particularly great. On the HDMI port at 30Hz, the display is rock solid. I suspect this is an issue with my DisplayPort cable - my card has mini-DP, and the included cable is full-size, so I picked up a mini-DP to DP cable from the corner computer store. I suspect it might be an older cable only rated for DP 1.1, and so not able to reliably carry the 4K@60Hz signal. I'll order another cable online and test that again.
Right now I'm running quite happily at 30Hz; you can notice the difference, but for work, watching movies, and light gaming it's not a really problem.
The remaining question is Windows 8's scaling. It's a bit of a mixed bag. I'm having more luck (for some reason) on my desktop than on my notebook (a 1080p 13.3" screen, so basically the same DPI as this). I'll report back on that aspect in a few days.
The on-screen display is driven by a little joystick on the back of the monitor; you can easily reach it from the front - it's just behind the lower right corner. It works quite well, and has all the usual amenities. I haven't yet tried features like picture-in-picture or picture-by-picture, but I have little use for them anyway.
Overall, it's a good monitor for its target audience, and at this price, a good buy. The big selling point is not this monitor in particular but 4K and high-resolution displays generally. : It's like washing the mud off your screen; everything is suddenly so clear. I'd find it hard to go back, and I've only had it a day.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
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It's too bad that Windows and Mac OS GUIs didn't embrace scalable graphics until so late, which surely was a major reason that higher resolution displays failed to catch on until recently. I recall a few ~300 dpi grayscale CRTs back in the mid 80s, but likely cost, widespread color, and software problems prevented any significant adoption.
Posted by: Kayle at Friday, January 23 2015 07:05 AM (W8clb)
2
Yes, there were always a few high-res displays, for medical imaging and engineering and similar uses. The IBM T220 was a 4K LCD back in 2002 - but it cost the best part of $20,000.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Friday, January 23 2015 03:55 PM (2yngH)
3
The Tektronix 4014 was 4K*3K in 1974. (I worked on it as my first job out of college.)
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at Saturday, January 24 2015 12:26 AM (+rSRq)
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Tuesday, January 20
4K Or Not 4K
Guess the answer is 4K. Dick Smith has the
Samsung U28D590D on sale for $499 right now, and even had it in stock at my local store, so I trotted over there at lunchtime and got one.
This is one I considered and rejected before, because it's a TN rather than an IPS panel. Having now had a chance to look at one up close... Frankly, if they'd said it was IPS I probably would have believed them. It doesn't have the characteristic colour shift of TN when viewed at a sharp angle, though there is a brightness/contrast shift. I think it will do fine.
Also, at $499 for a 28" 4K monitor, I'm willing to forgive a few minor foibles. Just 15 months ago the only 4K monitor for sale here cost $4200.
The stand does wobble if you poke it, which is the first thing every review comments on. Samsung, spend another $5 on the stand for next year's model, okay?
Review later once I finish work for the day and have a chance to set it all up.
Update: The display glitches when I run it on DisplayPort at the full 4k@60Hz. It doesn't glitch on HDMI running 4k@30Hz. I'll try it with a different DisplayPort cable as soon as I can find one.
Running at 30Hz isn't a killer, but you do notice, so I'm really hoping that it will be happy at 60Hz with a cable swap.
Update: Some other people have reported these issues with this monitor and Radeon video cards, and the solution is to find a better cable. So I'll do that. Meanwhile:
Also on the plus side, I plugged it into my new notebook, and it worked immediately. Only 4k@30Hz, but many notebooks have trouble running higher than 1080p for an external display, so I'm happy with that.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
02:25 PM
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1
What do "TN" and "IPS" mean?
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at Tuesday, January 20 2015 03:21 PM (+rSRq)
2
TN is "twisted nematic". IPS is "in-plane switching".
I'm a little fuzzy on exactly how this works at the molecular level, but as I understand it, in a TN panel the liquid crystals are perpendicular to the screen, where in IPS they're parallel - in the plane of the screen, hence the name.
The result is that IPS panels look much the same from any angle, where TN panels can have a pronounced colour shift at sharp angles - in cheap screens, the colours can be completely inverted if you view the monitor from a 45 degree angle above. This monitor showed almost none of that.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Tuesday, January 20 2015 03:57 PM (PiXy!)
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