1. Focus components firmly adhere to differences. The LCD monitor adopts a common LCD panel, which has higher physical stability than a flat display, such as viewing angle, response time, brightness, etc.
2. Output flag signal interface divergence. The LCD monitor outputs AV signals modeled after video signals and is compatible with other signal sources such as VGA and YPbPr;
3. The image processing punishment module is responsible for planning and management. There are significant differences in the image processing, punishment, and point planning between LCD monitors and displays.
4. Size range. LCD monitors can be used for monitoring purposes in sizes ranging from tens of inches to hundreds of inches. The size of the monitors used for connecting to computers is mainly concentrated within 30 inches.
5. Change frequency divergence. The frequency of the LCD monitor should be below 50Hz (imitating), and the monitor is important to 75Hz.
6. The differences in components, the selection of components for LCD monitors, and the management of current, power consumption, temperature, and electrical resistance issues, as well as the material dryness and redundancy of electrical strikes, and the uniform and unobstructed use of these components, make life even bigger.
7. The color tone restoration material is dry. LCD monitors will faithfully reproduce the monitored scene, striving for realism. The monitor will pause the rendering of the image for a better viewing experience, so it is necessary to restore the real monitoring scene.
8. Divergence in radiation levels. LCD monitors generally accept electromagnetic radiation from metal shell barriers, while the plastic shell of the display does not provide strong radiation suppression. LCD monitors and displays do not emit electromagnetic waves, but LCD monitors collectively have a metal shell that is effective in dealing with strong electric fields outside the barrier.