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SoyoSampleWide-screen desktop monitors aren’t just for the home video crowd.

For us e-booklovers, they’re better  than the usual portrait variety. The trick is to use a two-column, booklike view. The left screenshot shows what Mobipocket looks like on the Soyo 22-inch LCD that TigerDirect is selling for $199.00. Click here for a detailed view, although you may have to scroll.

Now, in the booklike mode running in “Full screen,” not shown, I can easily see more than 1,000 words at a time with imageMobipocket and a font smaller than tried here. By word count, that’s far more than with a typical paper book—and perhaps faster, more enjoyable reading for many. Not the worst setup for reading Moby Dick or other public domain works with some interminable paragraphs. While a standard 19-inch-monitor would also have worked in the two-column mode, the extra width does make a difference, as I see it.

Catnip if you want to laze back

With Mobipocket Desktop you can use the mousewheel to change pages. Combine that wrinkle with a wireless mouse, and you can laze back in your reclining chair and enjoy the bigger fonts without a keyboard or cable to spoil the fun.

FBReader, which I most often use on handhelds, lacks double-column capability, at least in the Windows version, although I suspect it’ll be coming in time. One free program which does offer it on Windows boxes is yBook. uBook has similar capabilities and runs on Windows and CE systems and maybe others. What are your own favorite apps for double-column e-reading on various operating systems, and why?

Still keen on handhelds for e-books: Yes, I prefer handhelds and small tablets for e-book reading even with the two column feature now available in the full glory of the 22-inch monitor—I’d rather not sit constantly at a desk. But not everyone feels this way. Beyond that, the wide screen means I can more easily take in online newspaper and blow up the type. Same for other browsing.

Warning about the Soyos from Tiger: I lucked out. Some customer-reviewers have complained of dead pixels and other problems. To be on the safe side, you might want to pay a bit more and get, say, an Acer.

More caveats: At least try to see a monitor in a store before you buy. Also insist on a refresh rate of 75hz or higher for the resolution you’ll be running the monitor in. The Soyo’s 75hz is adequate but hardly stellar. If you hate the smallest trace of flicker, you might aim for 80 or 85, which, however, would increase your costs. See some tips here and here.

The negative and positive of wide-screen monitors for writing: Some people may find that they write better with a monitor in the portrait mode, given their screen-scanning habits. Then again, with a wide screen monitor—landscape, in other words—you can blow up the font in a program like Word and never miss worry about left-to-right scrolling. You might actually catch more errors than with paper. Alas, Windows Live Writer, which I use to turn out the TeleBlog, lacks a zoom capability, and I normally prefer to operate with a higher res than, say, 800X600—so the font size still isn’t as big as I’d like. As I write this, I’m using 1,280X800.

STANDard advice—including a VESA reminder: I used an Ergotron Neo-Flex stand left over from my older LCD display so I could position the Soyo at just the right height, without fuss. Don’t buy the 22-inch Soyo if you lack a stand. The good news is that you can find some cheapies on eBay, although you’d want to check to see if they’ll work with the larger monitors. Get an LCD with VESA-spaced holes for the screws for the mount. VESA, by the way, is far from perfect as a standard—but better than the e-book format war.

The 24-inch possibility: Yes, I’d have gone for 24 inches if my budget had allowed.

A recycling tip: My old CRT went to a TV shop, which also handles old computers and which didn’t charge me anything. I of course leveled with the shop about the condition. Happy parts scavenging!

Related: The double-column trick for e-books on  the Tablet PC, the Cybook and other big-screen readers.

 
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