lifevicarious
iPF Noob
How can this be true? PC applications on widescreen monitors (16:10) are twice as good as standard monitors (4:3), which is the very reason standard monitors are going the way of the floppy drive. Wider view is always better when working in 99% of applications, especially in landscape mode. The extra real estate would come in handy in far more applications than just movies. Mail, Websites, Video, Games, I can't think of any landscape application that wouldn't be better on a 16:10 screen.
What websites would be better in 16:9?? The reason PC monitors are going widescreen is because they are multimedia and are now designed to play movies and television shows which are primarily shot in 16x9. Websites and documents are much closer to 4:3. I have a widescreen iMac but for documents and websites the reason I like it better is becasue I can have two windows open at the same time, it has nothing to do with the shape of the window. And if reading documents, they will look stupid in landscape on a 16:9 as I have to scroll to read one page.
If this was primarily a movie watching device I could agree, but given that websites and books which are a huge part of this device are not, it makes no sense to me to go 16:9.
I completely disagree. When viewing websites (end especially forums), the wider the display the more data you see, period. This forum is an example. Many web developers/designers are making their web page widths overall percentages of screen size, instead of fixed pixels... and even when they are fixed pixels they are usually 1200px +. Widescreen devices are hear to stay and the web as a whole is updating itself to that format.
Wider display means far less scrolling.
Different strokes for different folks I guess as I completely disagree with you. Although on this site you can certainly widen it, it has a minimum width. The apple site has white bars on both sides regardless of how wide you make it. As does cnn, espn, msnbc, fox, nytimes, etc.
The standard web page design is 1024 x 768 which happens to be what AR? Oh, that's right, 4:3.