Need new LCDs for image editing

I'm currently using three dissimilar 1680x1050 LCDs on my workstation and would like to replace them with three 1920x1200 LCDs. My wife is getting into professional photography, so I'd like something geared towards that.
Requirements:
1920x1200
DisplayPort plus two other digital inputs
I was looking at this display: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16824236119 and thought that would be good. Thoughts? Any others out there of similar (or lower) price that are at least as good?
Thanks
Requirements:
1920x1200
DisplayPort plus two other digital inputs
I was looking at this display: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16824236119 and thought that would be good. Thoughts? Any others out there of similar (or lower) price that are at least as good?
Thanks
0
Comments
Comes with DP/HDMI/DVI.
Go.
DVI-HDMI or DP-HDMI adapters be cheap
also, I've talked with Thrax numerous times on monitors, get the HP ZR24w. Get 3 of them
your monitor has 3 PC's
makes sense now
It MUST be IPS if you want to do color correct photo editing. I recommend at LEAST a 93% RGB Gamut (NOT ADOBE!) but not greater than 110% claimed. Monitors with >110% Gamut claimed tend to exhibit color shifting. I prefer LG's latest generation IPS, but there's no downside to NEC's panels either.
Your desired lifespan needs to be a factor as well. CCFL backlit displays do wear out; 36-48 months is about the usable lifespan before backlighting has dimmed to the point of making it impossible to correct coloring. Dimming typically starts at about 24 months. The only fix is to replace the entire backlighting system, which has a high likelihood to introduce bleed due to disassembly and reassembly.
LED displays are too new, but they don't suffer from dimming - however, that doesn't mean they won't suffer abrupt failure at some point. Again; insufficient data to make any sort of lifetime estimation. (Claim is typically >40K hrs.) There's also the issue that you have to watch for color-shifted LEDs. RGB LED backlighting is best, but several THOUSAND dollars per display. For white LEDs, you need to watch for red shifting. I won't pretend to understand why it's red shifting (based on color temps it should be blue by my understanding) but reports are, red shifted.
...maybe a quick Eyefinity drive with the Radeon HD 6950 is in order...