I've posted this in a couple other forums, but haven't got any good answers yet, so I'll try ArsTechnica...<P>I just bought a new NEC FP955 19" monitor. This is my second one, because the first one I ...
Inverse ghosting occurs when you set your monitor's overdrive option too high, resulting in bright trails around moving objects. To get rid of inverse ghosting, lower the overdrive setting on your ...
For motion to look crisp and clean, your monitor's response time has to keep up with the refresh cycle. If pixels take too long to transition between frames, you'll experience smearing and ghosting, ...
I don't know if it's actually called "ghosting" in the realm of computer monitors, but that's what the problem is called when you see it on a TV. <BR><BR>Essentially, a dozen pixels or so to the right ...