A discount LCD monitor has around "1920 x 1080" pixels but this may vary by the type of flat screen television you have as all televisions are not the same. A standard monitor will have the lowest possible settings for pixels.
An LCD monitor is a liquid crystal display. The LCD monitor has a large number of pixels and uses liquid crystals to help light the display.
The native resolution, which is the actual (and fixed) number of pixels built into the monitor.
The number of pixels on an LCD monitor depends on its resolution. Common resolutions include Full HD (1920x1080), which has approximately 2.1 million pixels, and 4K (3840x2160), which has around 8.3 million pixels. Higher-end monitors can have even greater resolutions, such as 5K (5120x2880) or 8K (7680x4320), offering significantly more pixels. Each pixel is made up of subpixels that create the full color display.
CRT monitors use a beam of electrons to form the picture - LCD's use microscopic pixels. CRT's need large amounts of electricity to form the picture - LCD's work with low voltages.
You multiply the height and width of the display in pixels. The most common are: Full HD - 1920x1080 HD - 1280x720 SD - 720x480
Overstock sells a wide range of 22 inch LCD monitors for a lower price than the average home electronics store. Amazon is another option for a lower priced LCD monitor.
A B grade LCD monitor is typically a unit that has some sort of defect with the panel. The most common defect are stuck pixels. Other issues may be un-even backlighting or noticable flaws with the LCD panel itself. But the unit will still function with these defects.
Briefly, an LCD monitor uses thousands of tiny liquid crystals (the LC in LCD) as shutters that change from opaque to transparent depending on electricity applied to them. They let through white or colored light to form images, one tiny dot at a time. The dots are called pixels.
If you are wanting to fix dead pixels within your monitor its is possible but its your own expense. A company called macinstruct in the US claims to be able to do that but it may cost you money and may not actually work.
About 100w for a cathode ray tube and 60w for an LCD.
monitor no lag
Yes, as long as the lcd monitor has the proper connections.