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[OCC] EIZO Announces FlexScan SX2262W 22" Professional Monitor

1371 Views 14 Replies 8 Participants Last post by  prosser13
Quote:
EIZO, a Japanese manufacturer of computer displays has announced a new 22-inch monitor that they will be releasing in Japan on the 12th of January and later on for the rest of the world. The monitor features a Vertical Alignment Panel, which can reproduce up to 95% of the Adobe colour space (92% NTSC colour space). It boasts a native Full HD resolution of 1920Ã-1080 with a 6ms GTG response time, 12ms BTB, 1000:1 contrast ratio and a brightness of 280 cd/m2. Connectors are plentiful with two DVI, two DisplayPort outputs and two USB ports with a power consumption of 45W. It'll be priced around 69,800 JPY which is around 810 USD or 540 EUR.
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Looks like a decent deal for the price!
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16:10 is quickly dying off
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Quote:


Originally Posted by Firestorm252
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16:10 is quickly dying off

That's what happens when the "best" products are determined by marketing. People think "16:9 is wider than 16:10 so it's nicer to work with!" when they have no idea that it's the same screen with some extra pixels at the bottom.
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Ummm, so it has a narrower gamut than IPS, but costs double the price. Hmmmm
Quote:

Originally Posted by tK FuRY View Post
Ummm, so it has a narrower gamut than IPS, but costs double the price. Hmmmm
http://www.pchardwarehelp.com/guides/s-ips-lcd-list.php

You sure about that?
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I love me my 1920x1200.... F that!
Quote:

Originally Posted by MrAlex View Post
http://www.pchardwarehelp.com/guides/s-ips-lcd-list.php

You sure about that?

Might not be many IPS panels that are low and offer what I said. But there are very* few.

So yeah im sure.

HP LP2475w
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Quote:


Originally Posted by tK FuRY
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Might not be many IPS panels that are low and offer what I said. But there are very* few.

So yeah im sure.

HP LP2475w

Mmm, you have a point. How can you tell what the gamut is though of a IPS/VA Panel?
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Most people in the market for a wide gamut display are usually GD, Photographers, or Designers who use color correction (i1P, DTP94, or others ) and they will give you a plot of the aRGB vs the plot of the monitor.

If that's the question you're asking. Visually though, in regular apps the color will be slightly more saturated. I personally can barely tell the difference between 90 and 96, 96 and 100+.
Quote:

Originally Posted by tK FuRY View Post
Most people in the market for a wide gamut display are usually GD, Photographers, or Designers who use color correction (i1P, DTP94, or others ) and they will give you a plot of the aRGB vs the plot of the monitor.

If that's the question you're asking. Visually though, in regular apps the color will be slightly more saturated. I personally can barely tell the difference between 90 and 96, 96 and 100+.
You said it has a narrower gamut. As in, how do you know what the monitors gamut is, if it doesn't say in the specifications?
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I guess you wouldn't unless you purchase it and plot out the space.
I've got a 1920x1080 and while it took a bit of getting used to over 1280x1024, I love it now and wouldn't go back...

Not used a 1920x1200 to compare though, although I can see the benefit.
The company I work for has over 400 24" 16:10 monitors, just in our Colorado studio. I'm curious if businesses often prefer the 16:10 for the desktop space, and if so, if 16:10 will continue for businesses? Anyway, gamers and moviewatchers may prefer 16:9, but anyone that really needs every bit of desktop space may want to a 16:10.
how is this better then my $199 Samsung 2253BW? besides reso
Your panel is a TN, while this is a VA - better colour reproduction
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