• Some users have recently had their accounts hijacked. It seems that the now defunct EVGA forums might have compromised your password there and seems many are using the same PW here. We would suggest you UPDATE YOUR PASSWORD and TURN ON 2FA for your account here to further secure it. None of the compromised accounts had 2FA turned on.
    Once you have enabled 2FA, your account will be updated soon to show a badge, letting other members know that you use 2FA to protect your account. This should be beneficial for everyone that uses FSFT.

Dell U2711

I don't see what is wrong with people buying a $1000 monitor, when they spend way over that on their PC.

I rarely spend more than 600 dollars each time to put together a top of the line build, or close to it. A monitor has increasingly taken up more and more of my budget compared to other components though as crap tns have invaded the market.
 
I just found out the 2711 is CCFL backlit....hmm I wonder how much this effects quality.
 
I rarely spend more than 600 dollars each time to put together a top of the line build, or close to it. A monitor has increasingly taken up more and more of my budget compared to other components though as crap tns have invaded the market.

$600 for top of the line........NOT!!!

Dave
 
I just found out the 2711 is CCFL backlit....hmm I wonder how much this effects quality.

RGSPro said:
Looks awesome, but the black levels are not nearly as impressive as an LED backlit LCD.

Apple likely used LED backlighting for their imac in order to satisfy internal layout requirements. I've not read anything indicating that WLED-BLU is able to improve monitor contrast, so I don't know where you are getting this from, RGSPro.

There is also the possibility that WLED has poorer aging characteristics compared to CCFL.
 
Apple likely used LED backlighting for their imac in order to satisfy internal layout requirements. I've not read anything indicating that WLED-BLU is able to improve monitor contrast, so I don't know where you are getting this from, RGSPro.

There is also the possibility that WLED has poorer aging characteristics compared to CCFL.

I recently had a backlit LED LCD TV, when that thing showed black, it appeared almost as if it was off it was that dark. The blacks on these are clearly not that dark.
 
I recently had a backlit LED LCD TV, when that thing showed black, it appeared almost as if it was off it was that dark. The blacks on these are clearly not that dark.

I think beyond just LED, there are other differences between a TV and a computer monitor that would affect the black levels.
 
$600 for top of the line........NOT!!!

Dave

Pretty close man , pretty close, I always get intel's newest family of top performing cpus, I just don't get the highest clocked one, like for instance with my last upgrade, when the corei7s came out, I didn't get the fastest, but like the 2nd and third fastest at the time, a huge price difference for only a shade lower performance, even without ocing which many do

But I realize now I wasn't including things that carry over from previous builds like video cards, hard drives etc, even though I upgrade to the latest and greatest every few years with those too, unless the motherboard requires new types of connections when I am upgrading

I never really start from scratch, if so, then yes it would be quite a bit more than 600.
 
Pretty close man , pretty close, I always get intel's newest family of top performing cpus, I just don't get the highest clocked one, like for instance with my last upgrade, when the corei7s came out, I didn't get the fastest, but like the 2nd and third fastest at the time, a huge price difference for only a shade lower performance, even without ocing which many do

But I realize now I wasn't including things that carry over from previous builds like video cards, hard drives etc, even though I upgrade to the latest and greatest every few years with those too, unless the motherboard requires new types of connections when I am upgrading

I never really start from scratch, if so, then yes it would be quite a bit more than 600.

When the i7s came out there were only 3, the top end one for like $950, the 940 for $500, and the 920 for $250... So unless you were getting the lowest clocked i7 that build would be way more than $600. Not that the 940 is even remotely worth double the price of the 920, or that the 920 couldn't be clocked to the 940s specs easily...
 
I am very picky about color and want any game I play to look absolutely amazing. The 27" monitor price tag pales in comparison to the 2x58" plasmas I have (living room/bedroom). Of course, I ended up with those due to a disagreement with a local tv store (got a 65" LCD but it had huge problems with ips glow). They refused to give a refund...

I am really liking the u2711. No dead pixels, color seems uniform, lots of connections. No regrets whatsoever.
 
I think beyond just LED, there are other differences between a TV and a computer monitor that would affect the black levels.
I think he may be referring to local dimming, which can't be done with CCFL backlights. But I doubt many if any PC monitors have local dimming.
 
When the i7s came out there were only 3, the top end one for like $950, the 940 for $500, and the 920 for $250... So unless you were getting the lowest clocked i7 that build would be way more than $600. Not that the 940 is even remotely worth double the price of the 920, or that the 920 couldn't be clocked to the 940s specs easily...

I paid about $500 for my 940, but I had to drop another $600 on ram and Mobo. Sense my new Mobo had PCIe x16 V2 I blow another $400 on a graphics card and I still didn't have top of the line. Never mind about the Water blocks, cables and such. It's a lot more than $600.

The orignal comment should have been high-end rather than top of the line. I knew what he ment, I just could not resist sturring the pot.

Building your own rig is worth every penny.

Dave
 
It's a lot more than $600. The orignal comment should have been high-end rather than top of the line. I knew what he ment, I just could not resist sturring the pot.
I suppose that depends on how you look at it. I usually spend less than $1k on my builds, but for some reason, my bank statement says I spend a lot more. If only I could get the bank to read my build budget sheet.
 
so for about $1200 I can buy 3007wfp
so why is 27" incher is so pricey?
is it better that 30" dell 3008 and 3007?
 
so for about $1200 I can buy 3007wfp
so why is 27" incher is so pricey?
is it better that 30" dell 3008 and 3007?

I think the main reason that it's so pricey is the fact that it's a 27" with a resolution that's damn close to the 30" resolution...among other things.
 
I think the main reason that it's so pricey is the fact that it's a 27" with a resolution that's damn close to the 30" resolution...among other things.

Like the amazing amount of input options, PIP and awesome color.
 
I suppose that depends on how you look at it. I usually spend less than $1k on my builds, but for some reason, my bank statement says I spend a lot more. If only I could get the bank to read my build budget sheet.

As long as the Wife/GF does not see the bank statement your good.

Dave
 
Is this better than the 2209WA? Is the picture quality better? Or is it about the same?

Umm... Wait for a scientific review, if "Anandtech" or some other users didn't sum it up for you yet. In fact, start your own thread, just in case your comments get buried.
 
I'm mostly interested in using the u2711 for web, email and documents, occasional video and movies, not gaming. Anyone who's using one for that care to post comments or pictures? Does 16:9 vs. 16:10 make a difference here? I want to work at native font sizes, and am thinking that the test display might be a bit too compact for viewing comfort at the computer all day.
 
Umm... Wait for a scientific review, if "Anandtech" or some other users didn't sum it up for you yet. In fact, start your own thread, just in case your comments get buried.

I just woke up, I can't tell if you're jacking with me or not. :D

EDIT - It appears there IS a review!!!
 
I just woke up, I can't tell if you're jacking with me or not. :D

EDIT - It appears there IS a review!!!

I wasn't trying to jack with you (<-context error), but you should know that, reading back in this thread, there have been numerous reports of the Anandtech review being ineffective - If quality is your main concern, look at the FlatPanelsHD review for some guidance.
 
I'm mostly interested in using the u2711 for web, email and documents, occasional video and movies, not gaming. Anyone who's using one for that care to post comments or pictures? Does 16:9 vs. 16:10 make a difference here? I want to work at native font sizes, and am thinking that the test display might be a bit too compact for viewing comfort at the computer all day.

Quoting a post I made elsewhere:

Lower pixels per inch (ppi) = larger text:

27" 1920x1200 = 83.9 ppi
19" 1280x1024 = 86.3 ppi
25.5" 1920x1200 = 87.1 ppi
17" 1280x800 = 88.8 ppi
19" 1440x900 = 89.4 ppi
22" 1680x1050 = 90.1 ppi
20" 1600x900 = 91.8 ppi
24" 1920x1080 = 91.8 ppi
24" 1920x1200 = 94.3 ppi
20.1" 1680x1050 = 98.4 ppi
30" 2560x1600 = 101.0 ppi
27" 2560x1440 = 108.8 ppi

Pixel Size Calculator

You have a valid concern about the text being too small, because it's the monitor at the bottom of the list.
 
My laptop has 128.645 ppi (1680 x 1050 @ 15.4") there are some that run 1920 x 1200 @ 15.4" which would be 147.023 ppi

It's not that bad to use, it's definitely small but I like fitting a lot onto the screen and the 30" at 2560 x 1600 wasn't bad. I want to see a 24" at that resolution + 3 of them that would be much better.

I originally had a 30" because of the resolution, not the screen-size itself... now I'll have 3 x 23" 1080p's which will be ~50% more pixels than the 30" by itself.
 
My laptop has 128.645 ppi (1680 x 1050 @ 15.4") there are some that run 1920 x 1200 @ 15.4" which would be 147.023 ppi

It's not that bad to use, it's definitely small but I like fitting a lot onto the screen and the 30" at 2560 x 1600 wasn't bad. I want to see a 24" at that resolution + 3 of them that would be much better.

Not a valid comparison to laptop screens. Laptop screens are usually a lot closer to you and laptops are forced to cram more into a small space.

This monitor has the smallest pitch of any desktop monitor and most people will end up turning up the DPI setting in windows to compensate. Partially nullifying the resolution advantage. If you end up cranking DPI to use it, you are left with little improvement over a standard 24" at double the price.
 
While the PPI is drastically different from my Hanns.g 28" (25ish), it is not that far off from my 24" or 20" (12ish and 8ish respectively).
 
Not a valid comparison to laptop screens. Laptop screens are usually a lot closer to you and laptops are forced to cram more into a small space.

This monitor has the smallest pitch of any desktop monitor and most people will end up turning up the DPI setting in windows to compensate. Partially nullifying the resolution advantage. If you end up cranking DPI to use it, you are left with little improvement over a standard 24" at double the price.

I have my 15.4" laptop setup on a stand so it's at the same height/distance as my monitor, so I think it can definitely be a valid comparison. Now if it was in my lap, that would be a different story.
 
I have my 15.4" laptop setup on a stand so it's at the same height/distance as my monitor, so I think it can definitely be a valid comparison. Now if it was in my lap, that would be a different story.

You are missing the point. A laptop is used differently than a desktop. The screen has to be physically smaller for portability, so the dpi has to be physically tighter to get a meaningful amound of data on the screen. It has nothing to do with setting them next to each other.

The NEC 2490WUXi with is's ATW polarizer is a better choice if you can find one, and it is about the same price.

Dave
 
You are missing the point. A laptop is used differently than a desktop. The screen has to be physically smaller for portability, so the dpi has to be physically tighter to get a meaningful amound of data on the screen. It has nothing to do with setting them next to each other.

The NEC 2490WUXi with is's ATW polarizer is a better choice if you can find one, and it is about the same price.

Dave

I'm saying despite the reasoning of it being high-density, the screen is perfectly viewable/readable at normal desktop distance. That's my point.

Jordan
 
I'm saying despite the reasoning of it being high-density, the screen is perfectly viewable/readable at normal desktop distance. That's my point.

You may be sitting closer or have better vision. There are always exceptions.

I have BCV of 20/15 and sitting at two feet, I found the HC-3007 text too small.

Now this monitor has smaller. People with my vision/distance will likely find text too small.
 
You may be sitting closer or have better vision. There are always exceptions.

I have BCV of 20/15 and sitting at two feet, I found the HC-3007 text too small.

Now this monitor has smaller. People with my vision/distance will likely find text too small.

Yeah, that's definitely true. Depends on the person. For me, I think it will be fine. But yeah, won't work everyone I suppose.
 
I'm saying despite the reasoning of it being high-density, the screen is perfectly viewable/readable at normal desktop distance. That's my point.

Jordan

I beleave you, All I am saying is that laptops are designed to meet a different set of requirements, so there not a good comparison.

I am glad it works for you, but I know several people with close to perfect vision that do not want to work with a 24" LCD at native resolution and standard dpi. Age has something to do with it also.

Enjoy it

Dave
 
How bad the input lag on U2711?
Currently I own 2709W and 2407WFP, and the input lag on 2709W pretty noticeable comparing to 2407WFP, around 20ms.
I'm considering to buy the new 27", but the input lag thing bothers me.
 
Back
Top