Friday, September 20th 2013

ViewSonic's Quad HD Display Delivers the Ultimate in Color and Image Quality

ViewSonic Corp., a leading global provider of visual solution products, is expanding its product family of professional displays by announcing the availability of its 27" VP2772 Adobe Color QHD display. "Color performance is of the utmost importance to our professional series customers," said Kenneth Mau, Product Marketing Manager for ViewSonic. "The VP2772 delivers the ultimate in image quality with its Adobe Color capability and a 10-bit panel that delivers 1.07 billion colors. It is also equipped with all the premium features the pros need including flexible connectivity options, and daisy chain functionality."

Ideal for photography, graphic design, media creation, publishing and other color-critical applications, this 27" display delivers outstanding levels of detail and clarity with 2560×1440 QHD resolution. Accurately displaying 99 percent of the wider Adobe RGB color space, the VP2772 features an advanced 12-bit color engine and 14-bit LUT that processes up to 68.7 billion colors, creating stunning images with true-to-life colors.
Featuring a SuperClear IPS panel calibrated with a Delta E?3 value, users will experience the optimal combination of wide viewing angles and accurate and consistent color performance. Equipped with dual DisplayPort inputs and one DisplayPort output, the VP2772 allows one image source to be shown simultaneously on multiple daisy-chained displays. Paired with HDMI and DVI inputs, and a total of four USB 3.0 ports, connecting to multimedia, storage devices and peripherals is seamless. True to the ViewSonic's VP series standard, the VP2772 incorporates an ergonomic design with tilt, pivot, swivel and height adjustments to create a more comfortable and productive working environment.

The VP2772 will be available in the Americas in mid-October for an ESP of $999.
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10 Comments on ViewSonic's Quad HD Display Delivers the Ultimate in Color and Image Quality

#1
lemonadesoda
Nice screen. Shame it isnt a little further away from the $1000 standard.

SAY Yes to high quality screens.

SAY Yes to lower prices.

Equation doesnt correlate! ERROR
Posted on Reply
#2
Prima.Vera
Recently only IPS and TN screens. What happened to intermediary SPVA screens??
Posted on Reply
#3
freaksavior
To infinity ... and beyond!
Do they come pre-calibrated? If not, I do not see any reason to purchase them for $1000.
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#4
a_ump
i'm having a hard time understanding why so many different colors are needed to be displayed when its estimated that the human eye can only see 10million. So we're missing out on ~90% of this monitor's capabilities. Am i missing something?

Nice looking monitor tho.
Posted on Reply
#5
Prima.Vera
a_umpi'm having a hard time understanding why so many different colors are needed to be displayed when its estimated that the human eye can only see 10million. So we're missing out on ~90% of this monitor's capabilities. Am i missing something?

Nice looking monitor tho.
68 billion colours, as usual, is a marketing stun. As much as they want to convince the Joes, here is no tech invented yet that can display so many colours. Besides is useless. No OS is capable yet, as far as I am aware, of displaying more than 32bit colours, that is 16 million, so...
Posted on Reply
#6
newtekie1
Semi-Retired Folder
freaksaviorDo they come pre-calibrated? If not, I do not see any reason to purchase them for $1000.
It seems like it is pre-calibrated.
TFAPre-calibrated to achieve average Delta E≤3 for outstanding color accuracy
Posted on Reply
#7
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
The more I see articles like these, the more I feel pretty good about getting 3 IPS panels for 5760x1080 instead of paying twice as much for just one of these 2560x1440 panels. :pimp:

IPS is definitely the way to go nowadays though. I'll never go back to a TN display.
Posted on Reply
#8
newtekie1
Semi-Retired Folder
AquinusThe more I see articles like these, the more I feel pretty good about getting 3 IPS panels for 5760x1080 instead of paying twice as much for just one of these 2560x1440 panels. :pimp:

IPS is definitely the way to go nowadays though. I'll never go back to a TN display.
You can get 2560x1440 IPS monitors for $350, this monitor is just super expensive because it is color calibrated and endorsed by Adobe.
Posted on Reply
#9
DarkUltra
Prima.Vera68 billion colours, as usual, is a marketing stun. As much as they want to convince the Joes, here is no tech invented yet that can display so many colours. Besides is useless. No OS is capable yet, as far as I am aware, of displaying more than 32bit colours, that is 16 million, so...
I thought they need the extra precision for the calibration and when the backlight is not lit at reference level. 24bit is all we can distinguish, but once we mess with it we quickly lose dynamic range. More precision is also needed if we want an HDR display. By that I mean a display that can be as bright as outside in the sun and completely dark. Then the eye will adjust to different levels when you i.e. exit a cave and need "another" range of 24bit for the bright outdoors.
Posted on Reply
#10
DarkUltra
lemonadesodaNice screen. Shame it isnt a little further away from the $1000 standard.

SAY Yes to high quality screens.

SAY Yes to lower prices.

Equation doesnt correlate! ERROR
Don't listen to this hypocrite Viewsonic! If we can have $500 motherboards with every bell and whistle, or a $1000 CPU for a meagre 3% performance increase... And not I'm not even gonna mention ram! We even have a GPU named Titan.

You should know where I'm betting at: 120hz, strobing backlight, zero input lag, 8bit colors, precalibrated, 4K, IPS, 3ms gtg. It seems the only PC tech not improving is the very part we stare at all day. #%&#@$¥ grrr
Posted on Reply
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