Do you have to sit further from multi-monitor setups?A lot of people also don't consider, just having a larger screen means you simply have to sit back further from it.
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Do you have to sit further from multi-monitor setups?A lot of people also don't consider, just having a larger screen means you simply have to sit back further from it.
Do you have to sit further from multi-monitor setups?
Picture of the only anti-reflective glass (Plasma Deposition Coating on the left) LG uses. Black=grey, I can see why the revealed the monitor in an extremely bright room. Black screen, more pictures can be found here.
What's your point?
That anti-reflective glass causes blacks=grey? If so, I fail to comprehend how that is logically possible. The black level is dependent solely on the panel and backlighting.
Endgaget doesn't do technical monitor reviews. Unless someone like TFTCentral get's their hands on one, I doubt we will see one. From all the various 5K Imac reviews, people are raving about the display. Not much not to like about an AR-gloss 5K IPS as long as it doesn't have any major faults.
Seems endgaget really loves the 5K IPS panel that will both be used in the Dell monitor and the IMac:
http://www.engadget.com/2014/10/22/imac-with-retina-display-review/
Although the article did get something wrong. 5K is 77% more resolution than 4K, not 67%.
Could I get one of these at 50"? or maybe a 4K at 44"?
They're quoting Apple on the 67%. That is comparing 4096×2160 to 5120x2880. (14.7 million / 8.8 million)
Back in September we brought you the news of Dell's forthcoming 27" 5k (5120 x 2880) resolution display. New reports suggest that despite the initial expected retail price of $2499, and what is currently listed on Dell.com, the UP2715K is now expected to retail for under $2000 USD and should be available in December.
The Dell.com page for the UP2715K has also now emerged so we now know more about the screen and the full spec. The 27" screen offers a 5120 x 2880 resolution, 8ms G2G response time, 1000:1 contrast ratio, 350 cd/m2 brightness and 178/178 viewing angles. The panel is IPS technology with GB-r-LED backlighting.
An interesting element to the new screen is the coating. Optical bonding and an anti-reflective coating eliminate reflection from two surfaces — the LCD panel itself and the protective glass layer in front of it — allowing more light to be transmitted and dramatically improving clarity, vividness and contrast. An anti-smudge coating allows you to easily clean away fingerprints.
The screen has a wide colour gamut supporting 99% Adobe RGB and 100% of sRGB coverage. The screen is factory calibrated for reliable grey scale and a colour deltaE of <2. The screen has 12-bit internal processing and the panel supports true 10-bit content (1.07b colours). The 12-bit 3D Look Up Table (LUT) allows for hardware calibration using Dell's / X-rite's Color Calibration software package. The website suggests you need an optional i1 Display Pro but we believe the software should also support the i1 Pro and i1 Pro 2 devices.
There are integrated speakers by Harman Kardon for high quality dual 16W sound output. The stand supports tilt, swivel, height and rotate adjustments and the screen is also VESA compliant for wall/arm-mounting. There are 6 USB 3.0 ports in total, 1 of which has fast charging support on the back of the screen. There are 2x DisplayPort (for 5k support), 1x Mini DisplayPort (4k max only) and a media card reader provided.
See our previous news piece for more information about the UP2715K as well. The screen is not yet listed on Dell.co.uk so we do not have an expected UK retail price or release date yet.
New reports suggest that despite the initial expected retail price of $2499, and what is currently listed on Dell.com, the UP2715K is now expected to retail for under $2000 USD and should be available in December.
Nope, $2499. Looks like UP2715K is now live and available for order:
http://accessories.us.dell.com/sna/productdetail.aspx?c=us&cs=04&l=en&sku=UP275K3
Unlike that says nothing ExtremeTech article, has anyone actually installed Windows onto the iMac and (1) verified that it works and (2) checked what timings it uses? I'd buy an iMac and rip the guts out if it were possible to plug it into a standard PC with a hacked-up displayport cable just to avoid MST BS with the Dell.
Some people want "the best" and are willing to pay for it.I'm a little confused. Why is the UP2715K so much more than the P2715Q, which I just ordered for $500. It sounds like the UP2715K's colors are even MORE accurate, and obviously 5K is larger than 4K, but I feel like I must be missing something.
Does 5K scale way better? Is there a huge difference in the picture quality that isn't coming across in the specs? Is it just enough of a niche now that Dell is changing whatever they want?
I'm a little confused. Why is the UP2715K so much more than the P2715Q, which I just ordered for $500. It sounds like the UP2715K's colors are even MORE accurate, and obviously 5K is larger than 4K, but I feel like I must be missing something.
Does 5K scale way better? Is there a huge difference in the picture quality that isn't coming across in the specs? Is it just enough of a niche now that Dell is changing whatever they want?
Nonsense. A display with a matte grey bezel can make a display with inferior black levels look better than it is, but a display with superior black levels will look better, not worse, with a black bezel.Bezel colour, coatings and ambient lighting effect the perceived black level more than a panels black level. There is no point in measuring an LCD's contrast/black level if it uses edge-to-edge glass w/o AR, like most of Sony's new 4K TV's. There is a reason most 'professional' IPS, which are known for having low measured contrast (500-800:1), have matte grey bezels.
Nonsense. A display with a matte grey bezel can make a display with inferior black levels look better than it is, but a display with superior black levels will look better, not worse, with a black bezel.
The pictures you posted don't support what you've written, and what you've said is not true.You read my post by obviously ignored my pictures. It's obviously the Qnix+glossy bezels blacks look significantly lighter. Obviously when the lights are off it does not matter as much, but AHVA/IPS/PLS panels blacks are too bright for light-less rooms. Why do you think almost all of LG's IPS TV's have grey bezels?
The pictures you posted don't support what you've written, and what you've said is not true.
The current mid-range to high-end displays from LG, Panasonic, Sony, and Toshiba (and Pioneer, before the Kuro line was discontinued) have black bezels. Most have glossy black bezels. I don't know where you live, but, in US showrooms, you can't find mid-range to high-end TVs with gray or silver bezels anymore. Any forum poster can see as much at their local Best Buy. You are destroying your credibility by suggesting otherwise. In the past, gray and silver bezels were used on lower-end and mid-range models and black bezels were used on high-end models, in part as a selling point for the higher-end models.
Nonsense. A display with a matte grey bezel can make a display with inferior black levels look better than it is, but a display with superior black levels will look better, not worse, with a black bezel.
The best displays, in terms of contrast and black levels, all have black bezels. Refer to the avsforum for further information on this topic. I am not certain why you are so keen on promoting displays and panels with inferior contrast and black levels.
The pictures you posted don't support what you've written, and what you've said is not true.
The current mid-range to high-end displays from LG, Panasonic, Sony, and Toshiba (and Pioneer, before the Kuro line was discontinued) have black bezels. Most have glossy black bezels. I don't know where you live, but, in US showrooms, you can't find mid-range to high-end TVs with gray or silver bezels anymore. Any forum poster can see as much at their local Best Buy. You are destroying your credibility by suggesting otherwise. In the past, gray and silver bezels were used on lower-end and mid-range models and black bezels were used on high-end models, in part as a selling point for the higher-end models.
I think a 32" monitor naturally benefits more from 5k resolution than a 27" one. I wished Dell had come with a 32" one instead.
I think a 32" monitor naturally benefits more from 5k resolution than a 27" one. I wished Dell had come with a 32" one instead.
So this has a similar price to Retina iMac but with the iMac you get both PC and Monitor all in one.
Price wars are common throughout all facets of business, 5K monitors included. The price wars for this market have started, surprisingly, before a single stand-alone display technology has even shipped. Dell, which recently announced but not shipped its UltraSharp 5K monitor, has already said that it will cut prices of the device in the wake of Apple's latest 27" iMac jumping into the market. Dell's UltraSharp was announced back in September and will be priced under $2,000 from December, the same month it is set to ship.
When originally announced, this monitor was priced at $2,499.99. Even though Dell did not immediately provide reasons for the price drop, founder and President of Touch Display Research Jennifer Colegrove stated that Apple's 27" iMac, which sports a 5K display, may have been a catalyst. Apple is throwing in an entire computer with its 27" iMac with 5K Retina display for the same $2,499.99 price as the UltraSharp.
the iMac Retina is a huge value for a workplace 5k monitor, even at the $3200 price tag.
also, Apple with bad resale value? o
n what planet?
iDiots would pay an arm and a leg for anything with a half bitten fruit engraved over, no matter how old or rubbish, which the imac retina is not.