I'm disheartened by the many samples of "slipped quality" IPS panels in the 24" iMacs which seem to have become widespread since the aluminum iMac made it's first appearance. And it's starting to appear that the situation isn't any different with the newest generation of iMacs. Bleeds and screen gradients are totally unacceptable in a high quality computer like the 24" iMac using an IPS panel. After reading all the reports, I'm incredibly hesitant to take my chances on one knowing that I may have to attempt to return it time and time again in an attempt to get one with even a decent screen when it comes to bleeds and gradients. Therefore...
I'm thinking I may have to go down the same route as you with a basic Pro and a 23"....think the matt finish on the screen would be preferable too.
Consider too the possibility of using the soon-to-be-released Mac Mini, presumably 2.4 GHz C2D loaded with 4 GB of RAM... with a quality external monitor. That would make a very respectable 24" widescreen workstation... for less than $1500.
I know this because at present I use my 2.2 GHz MacBook with 4 GB RAM and HP LP2465 24" widescreen (S-PVA) monitor in a professional portrait photography studio for all production work and offset print prep. Works magnificently! A very nice and exceptionally versatile set-up. Cool to have a great desktop set-up and with just pulling a few plugs, the MacBook follows me to the sofa, bed, or on the road. I did install a 250 GB Hitachi TravelStar internal drive in the computer.
This HP LP2465 monitor uses the same Samsung S-PVA panel that Eizo puts in some of their higher end monitors selling for about three times the cost of the HP and has a very wide viewing angle, no bleed, no gradient. Very accurate colors. Easy to dead-on calibrate. And no iMac required! Of course it's not a brute tour-de-force powerhouse, but then again, for Photoshop use, RAM tends to make a bigger difference, generally, than processor, once you get up to and above 2.2 GHz. I'm a very happy camper with this set-up, but will like the next gen MacBook or upcoming Mac Mini with this monitor even more. I'm eagerly awaiting the new Mac Minis and the soon to arrive redesigned MacBook as a moderate speed bump replacement for my 2.2 GHz MacBook.