RockyRoad wrote:
>
> Does this really matter on a 21" monitor running 1600x1200?
> 

It is precisely on monitors of this size where screen rotation really begins to kick 
in for Finale users. (FWIW, what gave me the rush was rotating a 24" LCD panel that is 
1920x1200.) The reason is that you have enough horizontal resolution in portrait mode 
not to feel particularly constrained, and the 1600 (or higher) vertical dimension has 
to be experienced with a music score for its Finale power to be fully understood. 
Actually, I think the big payoffs begin with 1280x1024.

If you have a 1280x1024 or larger screen (even a CRT) running Windows, you can get an 
idea what it's like by downloading the free Pivot Pro demo from portraitdisplays.com. 
With minimal effort you can rest a CRT on its side for a demo. (It may play havoc with 
the colors to rest it on its side, but it recovers when you set it back upright.)

Look, I don't suggest you would always work with a monitor like this in portrait mode. 
Many programs (e.g., Protools) are much better in landscape. But Finale, esp. for 
orch. scores or any page layout, is a dream with a hi-res monitor in portrait. Both 
Pivot Pro (Win) and MacPortrait (OS9) allow you to switch as needed with a single 
keystroke. The tech tips on my website include a faq on how you can set up virtually 
any LCD panel, even ones from Apple, for screen rotation on demand.

-- 
Robert Patterson

http://RobertGPatterson.com




_______________________________________________
Finale mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale

Reply via email to