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ViewSonic VP150M 15" TFT LCD Monitor

ViewSonic VP150M 15" TFT LCD Monitor

List Price: $629.00
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great monitor
Review: I've been wanting an LCD flat-screen monitor for some time, but I kept putting off the purchase since they're so expensive. But a few weeks ago I decided to get serious and purchase one for my Windows98 system. I looked at the reviews on CNET and Amazon, etc., and at first I decided to purchase a VP151. Then I learned about the new 150m. It was a difficult choice, but I eventually purchased the 150m; so far, I'm delighted with it!

Installation wasn't completely smooth, since I ran into the usual so-called "plug-and-play" problems. Despite years of experience with this sort of thing, I always find that reality never quite matches either the printed instructions (in this case, half a page from the large, multi-lingual manual) or the Windows98 screen instructions. This was slightly more annoying in the case of installing a monitor, since a monitor is REALLY important, to say the least!

Nevertheless, once I rebooted a few times and tinkered around with reported-to-be-missing files, eventually I got things working. From this point on, everything seems great.

The display is BRIGHT (perhaps even too bright -- I've taken to reducing the intensity using a setting in my video card driver) and, as advertised, viewable from quite a large range of angles. The unit is reasonably attractive, and seems more-or-less mechanically solid.

I installed the included "PerfectPortrait" software; this allows me to easily rotate the screen display 90 degrees to see full-page display. "Full screen" might not be quite the story if you take into account the screen real estate taken up by your application's menu bars, etc. With Microsoft Publisher, for example, I find that I need to zoom out to the 90% setting in order to actually see the entire page. By some stroke of luck, though, this 90% setting seems to render the page almost exactly to scale.

The display seems a bit less mechanically stable in the rotated configuration; sometimes it lands at something more like 88 degrees instead of 90. But it returns to the horizontal position quite accurately, so this is OK with me.

The built-in speakers are fine for general use. I compared them with somewhat larger stand-alone speakers that had come with my Sony Vaio 526, and I decided I could live with the built-in speakers.

Anyway, I've been up and running for about two days so far, and I'm quite happy with the VP150m.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great monitor
Review: I've been wanting an LCD flat-screen monitor for some time, but I kept putting off the purchase since they're so expensive. But a few weeks ago I decided to get serious and purchase one for my Windows98 system. I looked at the reviews on CNET and Amazon, etc., and at first I decided to purchase a VP151. Then I learned about the new 150m. It was a difficult choice, but I eventually purchased the 150m; so far, I'm delighted with it!

Installation wasn't completely smooth, since I ran into the usual so-called "plug-and-play" problems. Despite years of experience with this sort of thing, I always find that reality never quite matches either the printed instructions (in this case, half a page from the large, multi-lingual manual) or the Windows98 screen instructions. This was slightly more annoying in the case of installing a monitor, since a monitor is REALLY important, to say the least!

Nevertheless, once I rebooted a few times and tinkered around with reported-to-be-missing files, eventually I got things working. From this point on, everything seems great.

The display is BRIGHT (perhaps even too bright -- I've taken to reducing the intensity using a setting in my video card driver) and, as advertised, viewable from quite a large range of angles. The unit is reasonably attractive, and seems more-or-less mechanically solid.

I installed the included "PerfectPortrait" software; this allows me to easily rotate the screen display 90 degrees to see full-page display. "Full screen" might not be quite the story if you take into account the screen real estate taken up by your application's menu bars, etc. With Microsoft Publisher, for example, I find that I need to zoom out to the 90% setting in order to actually see the entire page. By some stroke of luck, though, this 90% setting seems to render the page almost exactly to scale.

The display seems a bit less mechanically stable in the rotated configuration; sometimes it lands at something more like 88 degrees instead of 90. But it returns to the horizontal position quite accurately, so this is OK with me.

The built-in speakers are fine for general use. I compared them with somewhat larger stand-alone speakers that had come with my Sony Vaio 526, and I decided I could live with the built-in speakers.

Anyway, I've been up and running for about two days so far, and I'm quite happy with the VP150m.


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