Active-matrix Liquid Crystal Display

An AMLCD (also known as active-matrix liquid crystal display) is a type of flat panel display, currently the overwhelming choice of notebook computer manufacturers, due to light weight, very good image quality, wide color gamut, and response time. The most common example of an active matrix display contains, besides the polarising sheets and cells of liquid crystal, a matrix of thin-film transistors (TFTs). These devices store the electrical state of each pixel on the display while all the other pixels are being updated. This method provides a much brighter, sharper display than a passive matrix of the same size. An important specification for these displays is their viewing-angle. Thin film transistors are mandatory for constructing an active matrix to the point where the two terms are often interchanged, even though a thin film transistor is just one component in an active matrix. Whereas a passive matrix display uses a simple conductive grid to deliver current to the liquid crystals in the target area, an active matrix display uses a grid of transistors with the ability to hold a charge for a limited period of time (much like a capacitor). Because of the switching action of transistors, only the desired pixel receives a charge, improving image quality over a passive matrix. Furthermore, because of the thin film transistor's ability to hold a charge, the pixel remains active until the next refresh. Seven different types of displays are on the market. Each type is associated with a specific resolution. The screen resolution signifies the number of dots (pixels) on the entire screen. The higher the resolution, the more dots or pixels and the more viewing space on your desktop. For example, a VGA monitor is the lowest resolution at 640 x 480. Oracle applications were designed for displays set at a resolution of 1024 x 768 (XGA). Getting a high resolution (UGA) screen on your laptop may strain your eyes if you set it to the maximum resolution, which would make objects on the screen very small.
Resolution
GA (video graphics array) 640 x 480
VGA (super video graphics array) 800 x 600
GA (extended graphics array) 1024 x 768
XGA (super extended graphics array) 1280 x 1024
SXGA 1680 x 1050
XGA+ 1400 x 1050
XGA (ultra extended graphics array) 1600 x 1200
GA (ultra graphics array) 1600 x 1200
UXGA 1920 x 1080

See also

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
holman stadium
silbury hill
the librarian (discworld)
granular synthesis
cincinnatus
joan boyle
modo
leica
jeremiah horrocks
biot number
sleep deprivation
garuda indonesia
divine simplicity
mechanized military unit
bumper cars
alec douglas home
quirigu
michael rennie
(c)brain
university of michigan business school
merle oberon
karl lagerfeld
john edward
plasma display
lszl moholy nagy
vernon l. smith
adam malysz
john arbuthnot
mile saisset
jules grvy
investment advisor act of 1940
felix antoine philibert dupanloup
steptoe and son
queef
henry thomas cockburn
list of specific demons and types of demons
archibald alison
robot control
groovebox
provost
spin doctors
coconut grove, florida
robot (camera)
iwo jima