From what I understand, the "progressively darkening corners" problem is due to poor edge seals, allowing moisture to contaminate the liquid crystal. This phenomenon first showed up in the active-matrix 1xx Powerbook series. Allegedly, the damage is somewhat reversible by doing a long, elevated-temperature bake inside a desiccated atmosphere. I've not had the patience to run a clean experiment to verify whether that method actually works.
Ooops. Didn't see the reply for a while.
Thank you, tomlee for your, as always, thoughtful response. I could develop ambitions to try a bake, but given that these displays are from around 2000, and the low price of new ones, I don't think it would be worth the effort. It's easier to just set the computer to do 1152 X 864 and put the display in the mode where it displays the pixels it's sent, rather than trying to enlarge them to the whole field. That way I just don't use the area around the outer edge (native res. is 1280 X 1024).
If it was just capacitor replacement, I'd probably take a shot at repair. It's a little bit of a pity, as these are old IBM (made by Samsung, I suspect) displays and the evenness of the brightness is better than anything I've seen on affordable (to me) modern day displays.
What about the 'bruising' sometimes seen in the middle of displays? Is that likely to be water somehow getting to the middle, or the polarizing film delaminating, or something else? I had an Apple 17" Apple Studio Display with two "bruised" spots, but I sold it on Ebay a long while back. I bought it on Ebay as a 20" Cinema display, discovered the seller was hallucinating, got a resolution and then sold it. Hmmm, let's see, I might still have my picture of the bruises on line, that I used when selling it...
Ah, here we go:
http://www.io.com/~trag/selling/AppleStudioDisplay/spotgrayfront.jpg
http://www.io.com/~trag/selling/AppleStudioDisplay/spotgrayside.jpg
at about 2:30 and 4 O'clock from the apple in the center....
Just read down further: Techknight thank you for your thoughts as well.