Now that you have finished grandstanding, small hairy one, perhaps you will permit me to make a few comments of my own.
Yes Jake: I'm a CRT owner that went to LCD and came bact to CRTs. Twice.
My frst desktop LCD was a small one. 12 inch was it? 800 x 600, anyway. It was a Samsung panel atached to a Dual LCD-PC, which started life as a ... er .... probably a K6-233, and went on through a variety of reincarnations, finishing up as a K6-III/450, I think. No, it was an overclocked K6-III+ @550 or so. Drive-wise, it had the Awesome Foursome: 4 drives, all SCSI, two of them 1st-gen 10K units (in an external box, of course). It might have been small, but it sure was loud!
That was, oh, maybe 2 years or more? A long time in this game.
Even when I first got it, there were bigger LCD screens around (though still uncommon) but they just couldn't cut it for image quality. The sharpness and clarity of the 12 inch screen was unmatched. I must have had a 17 inch CRT before that. A Videocom, I imagine. Never missed it for a moment.
One day it died. Kaput! Just like that. I couldn't get it repaired (no parts available, of course) so I stole the office Mag 19 inch CRT, and ordered a new Hitachi 19 for work, a simply superb CM753ET.
Going from the LCD to the CRT was OK. I missed the absolute flicker-free nature of the LCD, and the wonderful clarity, but appreciated the extra size and ability to run 1024 x 768. 12 inches to 19 inches is a lot of inches. (Err ... I seem to be sounding like Tea all of a sudden.)
Then I retired the Mag to the Belinda house, flirted briefly with an entry-level NEC 19 (it lasted a week - it was crap), and (once again) said To Hell with it, where is the cheque book?. I took the CM753 home and bought a Mitsubishi 21 for the office. Wonderful monitor. I still have it.
I kept my eye on LCDs through the 14 inch and 15 inch offerings, but in the end they were just not quite as sharp as the old 12 inch Samsung - and if an LCD ain't sharp, it ain't worth having. I took a 15 inch Acer home for a few days, and ran it on the Matrox dual display, but eventually decided it wasn't up to scratch. Ther were better ones around, but rather dear.
A couple of months ago, seeing as I have been spending so long looking at pictures lately (all birds - but not the sort Mercutio likes, the other sort) I decided that the old Hitachi 19 wasn't quite cutting the mustard anymore - they do decay over time, little by little.
I took a Mitsubishi 17" LCD home, unplugged the Hitachi CRT. Wonderful things! 500:1 contrast ratio, and clear as a bell. 1280 x 1024 is a perfet screen res, by the way. I really liked the extra space. The first generation of larger LCD monitors that are really and truly sharp enough to match my Mitsubish 21 (or my old 12 inch Samsung.)
But it bugged me. That flickery rainbow scrolling was jarring on the eye, and I wasn't entirely convinced about the smaller screen size. (17 inch viewable vs 18 on the Hitachi CRT or 20 at work on the Mitsubishi.) Something wasn't quite right.
So I took another one home: an Albatron 17 inch 500:1 LCD with built-in TV tuner. (I was toying with the idea of giving away my TV.) Ran them side-by-side for three or four days. They were different. The Mitsubishi was sharper and clearer, but the Albatron didn't do funny things when scrolling text. I looked at more and more bird photographs - that's the main purpose of the machine these days - and couldn't make up my mind which one to keep. Overall, the Mitsubishi was best for photograps, but the Albatron for text. But I still wasn't entirely convinced.
One night, I spat the dummy and plugged the old Hitachi CM753 back in. Much better!
I sold the LCD screens and have not regretted it for a moment. I'm typing on the Hitachi as we speak ... er ... as I type. Or something.
(Tea! Will you stop bloody giving me bad habits! I can't even write properly since you've been around.)