Monday, May 26th 2014
28-Inch UHD Iiyama Monitor with 1 ms Response Time Shows Up Online
Courtesy of a pre-order page on Overclockers UK's site we now know that Iiyama is preparing the release of an UHD (3840 x 2160 resolution) monitor. Named ProLite B2888UHSU-B1, the upcoming display makes use of a 28-inch TN panel and features a 1 ms (GTG) response time, an LED backlight, a 1,000:1 contrast ratio, 300 cd/m2 brightness, built-in speakers, a 'Blue light reducer', and DVI, dual-HDMI and dual-DisplayPort inputs. To get a 60 Hz refresh rate at 3840 x 2160 you have to connect via DP, HDMI will only get you 30 Hz.
Iiyama's 28-inch gaming monitor is backed by a three-year warranty and has a pre-order price tag of £499.99 (~ 617 Euro/$842). The ProLite B2888UHSU-B1 is claimed to arrive in early July.
Iiyama's 28-inch gaming monitor is backed by a three-year warranty and has a pre-order price tag of £499.99 (~ 617 Euro/$842). The ProLite B2888UHSU-B1 is claimed to arrive in early July.
21 Comments on 28-Inch UHD Iiyama Monitor with 1 ms Response Time Shows Up Online
I am, personally, waiting for the 22-inch-24-inch (max) models with the same resolution, 4K.
IPS
10 bit (or 12) colour
4:3 pixel ratio option
Call me when it's ready.
I hope you meant 16:10 ...
But you are quite the forum's hater, aren't you? :)
And here I was thinking I'd made the fact clear enough 1. Post wish list
2. Have two guys jump on the post in the mistaken belief that screen aspect ratio is the same as pixel aspect ratio.
3. Labelled as "hater" for correcting wrong assumptions
Edit: DVDs and BDs use square pixel ratios, so they wouldn't be performing the conversion anyway. But that begs the question, what content is actually available to consumers in native anamorphic format? All the content I've seen is already converted.
Aspect ratio is a matter of taste... For Web, Coding etc 4:3 rulez hands down. Games, entertainment and casual stuff like watching kitten photos 16:10 is the best :D.
And calm down... we all know this peace of thech is yesterday... calm down.
The chick got 8pts of 10.
And then, TN panel is not that bad, it is you that make from the mouse elephant, wrongly so.
As is said it builds up the final real DYNAMIC frame rate and this number should be advertised... they are afraid I guess. :D
And simple TN is yesterday... Super LCD tech many gimmicks pimping TN tech enough to look really awesome, especially viewing angles and colour accuracy. Here isn't even shown if it is 6bit FRC or a true 8-10bit panel... no matter if it really can handle such wide bits.
PS.
And Frequency = 1/T so those numbers are interchangeable... simple math...
Different parts of the frame (colours) can switch at different time.
Having a quick browse for upscaling/pixel mapping throws up a bunch of long-winded PDF's. There are a few Youtube (company sponsored) vids covering the topic, but you'd need to browse a dedicated AV forum for uncompressed (compression artefact free) comparisons
For people, of course, these numbers are useless and meaningless, people will accept whatever you deliver them.
Grey should be no color cell active... back light(white) passes through, the polarizer half cuts the amount of light depending how much you bend the cell with electric field...
Got the idea?