CRT monitor.
The traditional tube type ones that used a picture tube rather than a liquid crystal display (LCD) to create the image.
They are considerably larger and heavier than their flat-panel LCD counterparts, though they are capable of producing better colors and contrast, and can display multiple resolutions and refresh rates perfectly without having to upscale or downscale.
CRT (Cathode Ray Tube) Monitors are the larger of the older Computer Monitors. Usually with a large back on them and normally heavy. They did have the advantage (earlier) of providing better black levels and higher refresh rates due to the technological advantage of using CRT technology VRS's early LCD methods.
Now days the difference is almost non-existent. You can find a vast array of older CRT monitors on Craigslist or various flee markets or older computer shops.
If it's flat and thin? No CRT.
If large, glass fronted and bulky? Probably a CRT.
Hope this helps!
A monochrome monitor that is not a flat-screen monitor is one kind of cathode ray tube.
An obsolete desktop monitor.
the lcd
CRT stands for Cathode Ray Tube. In laymans terms a CRT monitor is the old-style glass tube monitor we all used for years and years before flatpanel monitors became cheap & popular.
There are different types of monitors including the TFT monitor, the CRT (Cathode Ray Tube) monitor and the LCD monitor. The LCD monitor uses a liquid crystal to display color and light variations.
PCU
Staring into a TV (witch has a cathoderay-tube) or a game (witch has an LCD screen sometimes) can give you a headache from eyestrain (especially if you have had a seizure in the past). Plus, MOST of what's on t.v and in games is mindless garbage, souly for entertainment...........but not always ;)
A "CRT" is a cathode ray tube. An old style computer monitor (not computer).
It's a CRT which stands for Cathode Ray tube.
there are two type of monitor namely : "cathod ray tube(CRT)" , " Liquid crystal display (LCD)" newtest3
The PC monitor, was developed from the CRT tube. It was first used in computing by the EDSAC, which also used it to store data.
The marks are ways for the healthcare provider to measure how far to insert the tube and to monitor that the tube has not moved further down the GI tract or slid out.