Q. I have a BenQ FP757 17" VGA LCD monitor, and I wanted to know how much I could get for it. It works great, no scratches or anything, but since it's for a gaming PC, we wanted to get something bigger.
A. Depends on when you bought it, it's current price, the price of the current market fav.
- In the eyes of a bank, Computer parts depreciate @33% every year. So subtract this amount from your cost price
- If your monitor is still available at a reduced price, factor in the price drop. For ex: if there's a 10% price drop, subtract this amount from your cost-price too. If the monitor is not available in the market at all, the discount calculation becomes complicated since your monitor can face a 50% depreciation or some appreciation too.
- If a better model is available at the same price as your model, apply a 10-15% off.
Remember, how much value you can extract depends purely on your prospective buyer's willingness to pay. I know of someone who sold a 1 year monitor at profit simply because a technology lab wanted that specific model very badly.
Most people I know had to sell 1 year old goods at 50% of the buying price.
HTH
- In the eyes of a bank, Computer parts depreciate @33% every year. So subtract this amount from your cost price
- If your monitor is still available at a reduced price, factor in the price drop. For ex: if there's a 10% price drop, subtract this amount from your cost-price too. If the monitor is not available in the market at all, the discount calculation becomes complicated since your monitor can face a 50% depreciation or some appreciation too.
- If a better model is available at the same price as your model, apply a 10-15% off.
Remember, how much value you can extract depends purely on your prospective buyer's willingness to pay. I know of someone who sold a 1 year monitor at profit simply because a technology lab wanted that specific model very badly.
Most people I know had to sell 1 year old goods at 50% of the buying price.
HTH
What is the impact of the resolution to the quality of the gaming experience?
Q. Hay all.
I have a 19" LCD monitor running on my gtx 580. M running it on 1366x768 resolution. Now, I like to play games in the highest possible details, with a lot of FPS <- and i'm not sure my monitor does that.
So my question is, should i buy a 1080p monitor? will it improve the image clarity or will it just reduce my FPS?
thanks
-NICK-
I have a 19" LCD monitor running on my gtx 580. M running it on 1366x768 resolution. Now, I like to play games in the highest possible details, with a lot of FPS <- and i'm not sure my monitor does that.
So my question is, should i buy a 1080p monitor? will it improve the image clarity or will it just reduce my FPS?
thanks
-NICK-
A. both. It will improve image clarity, but the higher the resolution, the lower the frame rate.
Although seeing as how your using the best single gpu card out on the market, your gpu would handle 1080p gaming just fine, even the settings should still be on max or very high.
Although seeing as how your using the best single gpu card out on the market, your gpu would handle 1080p gaming just fine, even the settings should still be on max or very high.
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