Yes. Turning off LCD monitors will conserve energy. Although LCD monitors are not subject to burn-in, their backlights can fade and burn out over time, so turning them off helps to preserve them.
LCD monitors are a cheap technology that present a pretty decent picture and can achieve a decently high resolution, while LEDs are more expensive with a better picture, and CRTs give off radiation and can't achieve a very high resolution. LCDs are very favorable monitors for their price, and decent picture quality.
yes if it broken
Response time
Press the ''zoom in'' button at the bottom left.
Computer monitors have higher resolution (more lines or pixels) than television monitors (screens or tubes). Computer monitors also have the ability to "address" (pinpoint and turn on/off or color) every pixel (single dot of color on the screen). Television monitors do not have that precision.
for both crt and lcd monitors switching on will result in power loss and in crt it wont damage the monitors but in lcd its a serious problem and you haven't mentioned the type of monitor.please reply A: I don't recommend it. There is some valid arguments concerning heat damage (left on) vs heating and cooling damage (off when not in use), but I don't care about them. When my nephew's monitor caught fire, he was at home(although not at the computer) and able to put the fire out. No-one in our family leaves monitors on.......
The brief answer is that LCD screens need to turn pixels off and on to display images. How quickly the screen can turn these pixels off and on, is known as response time. Response time is measured in milliseconds. I.e 1/1000th of seconds or part there of, for quicker refesh. - Lenny Bielski
The SOUND button will mute the speaker. Turn off the speaker when the metronome is not in use to save battery. The LCD stays on continuosly and it will not harm the battery life :)
Dual monitors will only work if your graphics card can support it. It cannot run off of a motherboard (then again i could be wrong) The motherboard supports dual monitors out of the box when running Windows XP. I'm using two LCD monitors, one is connected to the VGA port and the other one is connected to the DVI port, it works like a charm.
turn it off
Plug it in and turn the dial that shows the degree of coldness or change the temperature using the buttons.but if you have got a LCD screen you may have to change it using the buttons which will be near or next to the LCD screen
The power overload is what causes the LCD television to trip off.