Reply 120 of 161, by onethirdxcubed
Re the Toshiba T1950CT: That's an 8.4" screen, limited to 640x480 256 colors, and the earliest price I can find for it is $2799-3299 in the March 1994 PC Magazine. It's $2199-2399 by the end of 1994 though. That was a $400-$500 premium over the CS version so you really had to want it.
https://books.google.com/books?id=L2RD68Gg2sM … t1950ct&f=false
https://books.google.com/books?id=JRmzq4L7Hio … t1950ct&f=false
It's hard to generalize across the whole 1990s because things changed FAST in that decade; at the beginning very few people had DOS computers at home and if they did it was an XT class, by the end many people had Pentium II desktops and laptops. But even here there's a bit of a bias, just because the hardware existed in the 1990s doesn't mean it was available or affordable to consumers at the time.
For instance, a lot of computer equipment purchased for businesses was sold off cheaply in the aftermath of the dot-com bust. My Libretto was originally used by an oil company executive.
Also the price of SDRAM dropped hugely and many people upgraded, so there's another blind spot in the retro community where people think 512mb of RAM is typical or even limiting for a Win98 build, when the absolute high end at the end of the 90s was 128mb, and 32mb was more typical.
Here's a history of LCD production from 1997, saying that 1996 was about the earliest that even a 12" TFT LCD was commercially mass produced and that's the smallest size which was generally packaged into a desktop monitor. https://www.rrojasdatabank.info/wp109.htm