New computer and monitor

Dale E Heath
Dale E Heath Member Posts: 377 ✭✭

It's time to get a new windows 11 computer, which I've pretty much decided on. My question is the monitor. My current monitor is a flat 22". I think I'll stay with a single monitor, since I'm retired and not teaching or preaching any longer. Is a 27" too large? I'm also considering getting a curved vs flat. Is a 27" curved a good choice? Thanks for any opinions and suggestions.

Comments

  • Doc B
    Doc B Member Posts: 3,650 ✭✭✭

    You can't get 'too large.' The older you get, the bigger you'll want to expand the text so bigger is going to be better. I use a 32" and wish it was bigger. (But I can read my screen from across the room!)

    My current 32" is curved…first one of these I've owned. I really like it, more so that it reduces glare than anything else.

    Eating a steady diet of government cheese, and living in a van down by the river.

  • Jonathan Bradley
    Jonathan Bradley Member Posts: 1,151 ✭✭✭

    I currently have two monitors and was eyeing a 37-inch ultra-wide curved monitor to replace them. I agree with @Doc B , you can't really get too large.

    Pastor, Mt. Leonard Baptist Church, SBC

  • Antony Brennan
    Antony Brennan Member Posts: 837 ✭✭✭

    👁️ 👁️

  • Jonathan Bradley
    Jonathan Bradley Member Posts: 1,151 ✭✭✭

    The only time it would be considered too large would be if it didn't fit into your office….and that's when you know you need a bigger office. 😂

    Pastor, Mt. Leonard Baptist Church, SBC

  • MJ. Smith
    MJ. Smith MVP Posts: 54,938

    The first computer I ever saw took up a room larger than a gymnasium. It was one of two tube computers I saw before transistors became the norm.

    Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."

  • Antony Brennan
    Antony Brennan Member Posts: 837 ✭✭✭

    My first computer was a on a raised floor in a giant glass room. The people who worked in the room had hairnets and white coats. We had large disks as big as LP Records which stored a massive 64kb of data. We had no output screens it was all printed out to long perforated sheets, but we had transistors.

    👁️ 👁️

  • MJ. Smith
    MJ. Smith MVP Posts: 54,938

    No screens but I suspect you could watch the lights … and slow the computer to one instruction at a time so you could debug what a memory dump didn't tell you. I followed the lights before sending the problem to New York, when the IBM technicians missed a deck of cards reloading the operating system leaving the FORTRAN compiler unable to handle any arithmetic operation.

    Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."

  • Antony Brennan
    Antony Brennan Member Posts: 837 ✭✭✭

    Those were the days, when things were fun.

    👁️ 👁️

  • Frank Sauer
    Frank Sauer Member Posts: 2,040 ✭✭✭✭

    On the curved monitor part of the discussion - I will say that I really enjoyed the way Logos looked when I tested it out on my son's curved gaming monitor.

    Logos 10 - OpenSuse Tumbleweed, Windows 11, Android 16 & Android 14

  • David Palmer
    David Palmer Member Posts: 55 ✭✭
    edited November 2024

    I have a 34" curved and I really love it. As long a you have sufficient desk space, I'd say bigger is better… especially as I've aged.

    Pastor of Lower Three Runs Baptist Church - Martin, SC

    Romans 12:1-2

    Lowerthreeruns.org

  • JJ Wurtz
    JJ Wurtz Member Posts: 52 ✭✭

    I run it with 4 monitors. 29' Ultrawide and 3 27's. Next monitor I buy will be 34' or bigger curved..

  • Veli Voipio
    Veli Voipio MVP Posts: 2,070

    I am looking forward to buy a wide curved monitor.

    Currently having 32" flat and a couple of old monitors with the desktop.

    The laptop has 3184x2400 pixels in a 16" screen and I am considering to buy a magnifying glass to read it. 😕

    Gold package, and original language material and ancient text material, SIL and UBS books, discourse Hebrew OT and Greek NT. PC with Windows 11

  • Donovan R. Palmer
    Donovan R. Palmer Member, MVP Posts: 2,886

    LOL! That reminded me that my first personal computer was a Commodore 64! Tech had moved on by that point. I loaded code with a tape drive. I still remember the big upgrade when I had saved my pocket money to buy my first floppy drive. It was almost as big as the computer!

  • NB.Mick
    NB.Mick MVP Posts: 16,209

    This thread warms my heart for being so young (not the monitor part, having switched lately from 24" flat to 32" curved and sometimes feeling it's too big to see everything at one glance, but then it helps so much with reading the small print of stuff people are sharing on MS teams…) - the first computer I could lay hands on was already a PC, a clone of the IBM PC by Italian company Olivetti. Monochrome, two 5,25" floppy disk drives and I think it already had a small 10MB hard disk, but memory may fail me there and this came later. MS-DOS 2.1 or such.

    Have joy in the Lord! Smile

  • Frank Sauer
    Frank Sauer Member Posts: 2,040 ✭✭✭✭

    All the memories shared of first computers reminds me of the Tandy Color Computer

    Logos 10 - OpenSuse Tumbleweed, Windows 11, Android 16 & Android 14

  • Dale E Heath
    Dale E Heath Member Posts: 377 ✭✭

    I was hired by IBM in 1958 and trained on the RAMAC Random Access Method of Accounting and Control in 1960. It was vacuum tubes and had a massive 10MB disk storage with 50 platters and the R/W heads were positioned by an air compressor. https://www.ibm.com/history/ramac

  • Antony Brennan
    Antony Brennan Member Posts: 837 ✭✭✭

    My first Personal computer wasn’t even a personal computer it was an Amstrad PCW9512, or some number like that. No hardrive. It had two floppy disc slots. One for the program and the other for storage. I loved that machine.

    👁️ 👁️

  • JJ Wurtz
    JJ Wurtz Member Posts: 52 ✭✭

    My first computer was an IBM 8088 with a floppy drive. It was huge when we upgraded them memory with a 512K card. I also used to have one meg sipps memory chips. So glad they never stayed took on.


    Also loved my PC Jr 😁that my dad paid extra for the phaser printer.

  • Frank Sauer
    Frank Sauer Member Posts: 2,040 ✭✭✭✭

    I remember learning to program with Basic on one of these

    Logos 10 - OpenSuse Tumbleweed, Windows 11, Android 16 & Android 14

  • Donovan R. Palmer
    Donovan R. Palmer Member, MVP Posts: 2,886

    I haven’t seen one of those in years! In addition to the Commodore 64, I took a computer class that was based on the TRS-80. We had to write a simple computer game.