You can rely on Eizo and Totoku display technology
Eizo is not a new player in big-size LCD display market. Today the firm updated it’s portfolio with a new 24-inch full HD monitor for colorblind people. Eizo is hoping to set a new benchmark for artists, video editors and other color-conscious computer users with the launch of the ColorEdge Quietly presented at the PMA photo expo but named public now, the 30-inch Eizo LCD monitors is designed to be as true as possible to the color ranges that come along in most video: courtesy of twelve-bit color lookup and 16-bit color processing, the display gets 100 percent of the NTSC gamut and 97 percent of Adobe’s RGB colour space, ensuring that a few if any colors will be mishandled even in photo editing. Eizo is famous for its often specialised monitors. The company comes back with 2 new FlexScan LCDs that promise to cover 95% of the Adobe RGB colour space (and 92% of the NTSC colour gamut).
Totoku’s 22.2-inch CCL901 has a upper limit resolution of 3,840 x 2,400 at 24-bit colour, which works out to about 9.2 megapixels and 200 dpi. The company states this single- or dual-DVI LCD has a native gamma of 1.8 and 500-Kelvin backlights, which we truly hope stands for something to Photoshop fans out there. Their website says that the ME551i2 totoku drivers is capable of presentation 2048 shades of gray (per sub-pixel) with an integrated viewer. The ME551i2 has a 11.9-bit lookup table (LUT) that admits a pallet of 3826 shades of gray and can display 2048 shades with a specialised view and 256 shades without. Totoku displays are constituted of high luminance, high contrast ratios, exceptional viewing angles, and a long life backlight. All Totoku displays accept a extractible stand, and are full height adjustable with a tilt-swivel base.
Liquid crystals are almost exactly what they sound like: crystalline structures clad in a liquid. When electricity is run over a LCD array, the crystals either enlarge or contract, depending on the signal. Liquid crystals in 2mp act as a dynamic polarise agent. They change their orientation when you position a voltage across an LCD cell.