For my use and the current screen size, it doesn't matter....
I use a 19" Wide LCD monitor, no need to set it to portrait, size is good enough for the small space of my home office where I have my PC and my XBOX 360 connected to it. No need to have acceptable viewing angles when viewing from a low point of view, all I have there are some chairs. The result of that TFT LCD, that as far as I understood, has the worst viewing angles of all LCD technologies, is excelente for one person, even if moving the head. Very good for two persons. More than that, it is not good.
You have a TN panel, worst on specs, but not in real life. As you can see from the pictures and also the tekst, the viewing angles are pretty descent/good from the sides(image 2) :D
Now, if I were thinking of a TV, where the TV is usually placed above me and it needs to have good viewing angles from there, and that people across the room want to watch it too, TFT is unacceptable.
I assume with TFT, you mean TN. Yes, I can see the problem if the screen/tv was above head (like on some football pubs) :)
Regarding viewing angles, I think that you must consider your use and what you need, then you know what to look for.
But there are things that are as important, if not more important, like if you use the screen primarly for games (and what kind of games), movies, photo.... People just keep looking into contrast ratio and viewing angles, and this can lead to disappointments.
I agree. There are different people with different needs and its important to look for what covers your needs. BUT, shouldn't the spesifications reflect the actual point where image degrades, instead of the point where contrast is less then 10?
If you run a bar, wouldn't you want to know how the viewing angle would be for the audience? Or if you do sensitive color work, wouldn't you want to know if the image shifts after a certain angle (since you spent time and money to get a hardware calibrator so that your screen would represent colors, brightness and contrast the best it can)?
Should the industry change their standards, or is it enough for you to know that contrast is less then 10 on a certain degree? :)
Your screen has a viewing angle listed as (150/135) (compareble with the vx922 as seen above) and in the example the Belinea 10 20 35W has (178/178). If you look at the pictures above, do you feel that the specs reflect what you see on the pictures?