Friday, June 16th 2023

Philips Launches 5120 x 2160 Monitor with Thunderbolt 4 Connectivity

On June, 15th—the Philips 40B1U6903CH business monitor hit the market. It is equipped with a large, 39.7-inch screen (100 cm diag.), 5K2K (5120 x 2160) resolution, and a speedy, multifunctional Thunderbolt 4 docking solution.

A New Way of Working
The Thunderbolt 4 docking solution is flexible and versatile; allowing data to transfer at a speed of 40 Gbps with a bidirectional bandwidth and is also compatible with previous Thunderbolt cable connections, USB, and DisplayPort. With the Philips 40B1U6903CH being equipped with this technology, it is an ideal solution for professionals looking for fast data transfer, fast (1 Gbit/s) Ethernet connection, and 90 W power delivery capability to connected devices.
Built-in 5MP Webcam for Improved Video Conferencing
Adding to the Thunderbolt 4 docking, another key asset for optimal productivity is the Philips 40B1U6903CH's built-in 5MP webcam. Optimized for a better video experience, the built-in webcam has a noise-canceling microphone and 5MP webcam for high-quality meeting calls. The 5MP webcam also has the convenient Windows Hello certification; the advanced sensors for facial recognition log each user into all of their Windows accounts within seconds.

Visual Specs and Certifications for the Philips 40B1U6903CH
In addition to its key features, the Philips 40B1U6903CH monitor is equipped with features that make the display pleasing to the eye, literally. To avoid the potentially harmful effects of long exposure to blue light, this monitor is certified as TUV Rheinland Eyesafe RPF 50; which means that a blue light filter is always on. In addition, the monitor is designed with 178/178-degree viewing angles through IPS Technology so that the content being viewed is visible through almost every angle. Not to mention, images remain crisp on the screen with Philips 40B1U6903CH's VESA Certified DisplayHDR 400 qualification.

Additional Features for the Philips 40B1U6903CH
Apart from its visually appealing features, the Philips 40B1U6903CH is also designed for comfort: It is equipped with a Compact Ergo Base that tilts, swivels, and adjusts to its user's preferences. It is worth mentioning, as well, that convenience is of utmost importance for this monitor and it boasts an earphone hook for easy accessory use and stowage.

Adding on to the Philips 40B1U6903CH's feature arsenal, the monitor is also equipped with a MultiClient Integrated KVM switch that is ideal for managing a dual PC setup simply from a keyboard and mouse. In addition, the PowerSensor feature of the Philips 40B1U6903CH saves users up to 80 percent on energy costs by reducing the screen's brightness when the monitor is not in use.

Philips 40B1U6903CH Availability
With all these features in mind, the Philips 40B1U6903CH is ideal for professionals looking for a speedy docking solution without skimping on visual quality.

The monitor will be available for purchase on June and at a price of €1849,-
Source: Philips
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13 Comments on Philips Launches 5120 x 2160 Monitor with Thunderbolt 4 Connectivity

#1
Lauri
This minus the webcam plus 144Hz or faster refresh and it's perfect. Except for the price. I haven't seen any ultrawide 40" 5K gaming monitors at all.
Posted on Reply
#2
TheLostSwede
News Editor
LauriThis minus the webcam plus 144Hz or faster refresh and it's perfect. Except for the price. I haven't seen any ultrawide 40" 5K gaming monitors at all.
It does at least do 75 Hz...
And thanks for making me double check the specs, as the press release linked to the wrong product, so I had the wrong pics initially.
Posted on Reply
#3
lemonadesoda
If that is a "popup", or "popdown", webcam, I'm impressed. So that you can REALLY turn it off. If it fixed. Then that's a missed opportunity to give the monitor better contour lines and peace of mind for WEBCAM OFF.

As for curved displays? Not so sure. Think I would prefer to have a flat display. It comes down to: PLAY or WORK.

It's a bit big for a professional display for WORK. You'd be turning your head too much too often. I'd like to see a higher DPI version in a smaller footprint.
Posted on Reply
#4
TheLostSwede
News Editor
lemonadesodaIf that is a "popup", or "popdown", webcam, I'm impressed. So that you can REALLY turn it off. If it fixed. Then that's a missed opportunity to give the monitor better contour lines and peace of mind for WEBCAM OFF.
It is.
Built-in webcam Pop-up 5.0 megapixel camera with a microphone and LED indicator (for Windows Hello)
lemonadesodaAs for curved displays? Not so sure. Think I would prefer to have a flat display. It comes down to: PLAY or WORK.

It's a bit big for a professional display for WORK. You'd be turning your head too much too often. I'd like to see a higher DPI version in a smaller footprint.
I had the wrong pics, due to as explained above, the wrong link in the press release. It's not quite as wide or curved as the first pics suggested.
Posted on Reply
#5
Chomiq
LauriThis minus the webcam plus 144Hz or faster refresh and it's perfect. Except for the price. I haven't seen any ultrawide 40" 5K gaming monitors at all.
That's all up to LG since they're the ones making the panels.

As for product pic it should pretty much match the aspect and size of LG's 40WP95:
Posted on Reply
#6
AnarchoPrimitiv
120hz and freesync premium would have made this amazing....I've been desperately waiting for someone to release a 21:9 monitor with 2160 vertical pixels, 34" or bigger, and a refresh rate of at least 120hz. I have an LG 34" 5k2k monitor (got it as a sort of hand down from a wealthy friend) and its great for everything except gaming because it's only 60hz, it's not terrible, but 120hz would make it amazing, but surprisingly there's nothing on the market yet with those specs.
Posted on Reply
#7
Tek-Check
AnarchoPrimitiv120hz and freesync premium would have made this amazing....I've been desperately waiting for someone to release a 21:9 monitor with 2160 vertical pixels, 34" or bigger, and a refresh rate of at least 120hz. I have an LG 34" 5k2k monitor (got it as a sort of hand down from a wealthy friend) and its great for everything except gaming because it's only 60hz, it's not terrible, but 120hz would make it amazing, but surprisingly there's nothing on the market yet with those specs.
Exactly! This monitor need a new version very soon, if it's marketed for professionals. Plus, if Philips wants to charge €1,850, they'd better make sure the following features are in place. What needs to improve:

1. HDMI 2.1 port at 48 Gbps - (current HDMI 2.0b supports only 5120x2160 @50Hz - useless old port that cannot even fully drive the monitor; Philips, why?)
2. 120Hz or 144Hz - (current TBT4/DP 1.4a support 5120 x 2160 @ 75 Hz* with "*") - you cannot treat professionals with 75Hz in 2023
3. DP 2.1 port at minimum 54 Gbps or 80 Gbps, depending on resolution (5K/2K 120Hz 10-bit RGB needs UHBR13.5 signal; @144Hz it needs UHBR20 signal)
4. true 10-bit display (current panel is 8-bit + A-FRC)
5. HDR1000 certification (400 tier is not HDR; silly)
6. FreSync Premium Pro certification
7. HDR needs wider support - HLG and DolbyVision (current HDR10 is the most basic possible...)
8. HDCP 2.3 (current is 2.2)
9. QD-OLED panel with comprehensive pixel refresh software, similar to the one on Asus Vivobook 4K laptops with Samsung OLED display

Monitor manufacturers really need ot step-up the game with modern features, most of which are standard on 4K TVs.
AMD 7000 GPUs can output 48 Gbps over HDMI 2.1 and 54 Gbps over DP 2.1 ports, so such monitors need updated display IC as soon as possible.
Philips, are you listening?
Posted on Reply
#8
Tsukiyomi91
feature-wise this is for either offices or for a very specific set of users.
Posted on Reply
#9
CosmicWanderer
LauriThis minus the webcam plus 144Hz or faster refresh and it's perfect. Except for the price. I haven't seen any ultrawide 40" 5K gaming monitors at all.
I'd settle for 120hz. Hell even 100hz would be very tempting for me.
Posted on Reply
#10
SikSlayer
Tek-CheckExactly! This monitor need a new version very soon, if it's marketed for professionals. Plus, if Philips wants to charge €1,850, they'd better make sure the following features are in place. What needs to improve:

1. HDMI 2.1 port at 48 Gbps - (current HDMI 2.0b supports only 5120x2160 @50Hz - useless old port that cannot even fully drive the monitor; Philips, why?)
2. 120Hz or 144Hz - (current TBT4/DP 1.4a support 5120 x 2160 @ 75 Hz* with "*") - you cannot treat professionals with 75Hz in 2023
3. DP 2.1 port at minimum 54 Gbps or 80 Gbps, depending on resolution (5K/2K 120Hz 10-bit RGB needs UHBR13.5 signal; @144Hz it needs UHBR20 signal)
4. true 10-bit display (current panel is 8-bit + A-FRC)
5. HDR1000 certification (400 tier is not HDR; silly)
6. FreSync Premium Pro certification
7. HDR needs wider support - HLG and DolbyVision (current HDR10 is the most basic possible...)
8. HDCP 2.3 (current is 2.2)
9. QD-OLED panel with comprehensive pixel refresh software, similar to the one on Asus Vivobook 4K laptops with Samsung OLED display

Monitor manufacturers really need ot step-up the game with modern features, most of which are standard on 4K TVs.
AMD 7000 GPUs can output 48 Gbps over HDMI 2.1 and 54 Gbps over DP 2.1 ports, so such monitors need updated display IC as soon as possible.
Philips, are you listening?
The ONLY point of contention I have is #9, I like what I see with the LG MLA OLED panels, otherwise, you've listed everything I want in my next dream PC monitor. For now, I'm using a 55" LG CX OLED.
Posted on Reply
#11
kapone32
Tek-CheckExactly! This monitor need a new version very soon, if it's marketed for professionals. Plus, if Philips wants to charge €1,850, they'd better make sure the following features are in place. What needs to improve:

1. HDMI 2.1 port at 48 Gbps - (current HDMI 2.0b supports only 5120x2160 @50Hz - useless old port that cannot even fully drive the monitor; Philips, why?)
2. 120Hz or 144Hz - (current TBT4/DP 1.4a support 5120 x 2160 @ 75 Hz* with "*") - you cannot treat professionals with 75Hz in 2023
3. DP 2.1 port at minimum 54 Gbps or 80 Gbps, depending on resolution (5K/2K 120Hz 10-bit RGB needs UHBR13.5 signal; @144Hz it needs UHBR20 signal)
4. true 10-bit display (current panel is 8-bit + A-FRC)
5. HDR1000 certification (400 tier is not HDR; silly)
6. FreSync Premium Pro certification
7. HDR needs wider support - HLG and DolbyVision (current HDR10 is the most basic possible...)
8. HDCP 2.3 (current is 2.2)
9. QD-OLED panel with comprehensive pixel refresh software, similar to the one on Asus Vivobook 4K laptops with Samsung OLED display

Monitor manufacturers really need ot step-up the game with modern features, most of which are standard on 4K TVs.
AMD 7000 GPUs can output 48 Gbps over HDMI 2.1 and 54 Gbps over DP 2.1 ports, so such monitors need updated display IC as soon as possible.
Philips, are you listening?
While it doesn't have everything you listed I am loving my Gigabyte FV43U. It is only 4K but at 43" that is plenty big for Gaming. D4 looks so good on it that I sometimes Marvel at the colour. palette.
Posted on Reply
#12
Tek-Check
SikSlayerThe ONLY point of contention I have is #9, I like what I see with the LG MLA OLED panels, otherwise, you've listed everything I want in my next dream PC monitor. For now, I'm using a 55" LG CX OLED.
It seems that the new gen of QD-OLED have sorted out the issue of blurry letters and edges in Windows, due to new RGB sublayer. Not sure whether MLA deals with that on WOLED. Obviously, the sharpness of letters is still not as defined on any OLED as it is on IPS or VA panel, but they are going in a good direction.

Glad to hear you recognised the features I listed really need to be modernised on such expensive monitor. It cannot the the case that we pay almost €2,000 for a display that doesn't have such features in 2023. Philips and others m, step-up the game.
FahadI'd settle for 120hz. Hell even 100hz would be very tempting for me.
I have Samsung VA panel 34 inch 3440 x 1440 with 100Hz since 2018. Really good monitor for daily use, productivity, scrolling and gaming.

It's 2023 and Philips offers 5K/2K, which is great, but many other important features are missing at that price point.

This monitor is not worth more than €990. Any monitor beyond €1,000 needs to have more advanced display IC and HDR features. There are no ifs and no buts about it.
Posted on Reply
#13
TheLostSwede
News Editor
Tek-CheckPhilips, are you listening?
I doubt they are, as it's MMD-Monitors & Displays Nederland B.V. that makes these displays and they're a subsidiary of TP Vision, which in turn is a subsidiary of TPV Technology Limited from xina. So I'd suggest you try contacting the latter with your suggestions.
Posted on Reply
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