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Monday, February 9, 2009
Colour gamut is the ColorEdge CG222W's big selling point, and it almost covers all of AdobeRGB. Visually this display looks uniform, and there were no problems in out tests with viewing angles. Colours and density seemed to stay the same within a reasonable angle of view compared to most other LCDs. We also encountered no problems with shadow detail or banding, and the uniformity of colour and density across the screen was among the best we've ever seen. Beside the offensive asking price and lack of HDMI input, it's hard to find anything to fault the ColorEdge CG222W. Being fastidious, brightness is a bit low compared to other models, it has no speakers, no USB ports on the side of the bezel, and no auto-rotate of the images in the software. There are much more affordable displays that are better at handling your entertainment, gaming and general business needs, but if graphics are your business, the ColorEdge CG222W should be on your shortlist.
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Tuesday, August 14, 2007
Few monitors on the market can match the HD2441Ws? image quality. It perfectly renders colour from the very darkest to the very lightest shades, and motion video is crisp and blur-free. The only problem is the price, and perhaps the lack of more conventional input ports. If you need a non-HDMI 24-inch widescreen display for general computer use, you?ll easily be able to save hundreds of pounds elsewhere. But for a luxurious selection of digital ports, picture-in-picture facility and top-notch image quality, Eizo?s FlexScan HD2441W can?t be beaten.
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Thursday, July 26, 2007
Eizo is ringing the changes with the 24in HD2441W, which is aimed firmly at the movie watching, PC and console gaming fraternity, yet also offers better colour accuracy than its competitors. It sports a resolution of 1,920 x 1,200 and boasts the presence of not one, but two HDMI ports.
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Thursday, May 4, 2006
So you want a large LCD monitor. Well, so do I and I think I may have found just the one in the shape of Eizo's FlexScan S2410W. It's a 24in widescreen monster, and as you might know, that is my preferred spec for an LCD - ideal for image editing and word processing and/or gaming and watching movies...
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Friday, May 27, 2005
At the time of writing, the initial £3,299 outlay (excluding a colorimeter for £200 or so) is a big one compared to a trusty old, high-end CRT. However, if you (or your company) are serious about colour, possess the necessary budget, and want a display that will replace your aging, deep, hot and heavy CRT/s then I can only recommend Eizo's ColorEdge CG220.
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