Features:
- 20.1-inch viewable screen size
- 0.25-millimeter dot pitch
- 1,920 x 1,440 maximum resolution
- PreVu OSD with Coloright controls
- Macintosh and PC compatible
Description:
If you're tired of having too many windows crammed into a tiny display, take heart, for the Princeton EO2010 is just the monitor to solve your problems. At a grand 21 inches, this behemoth offers plenty of display space and is capable of running at a monstrously high resolution of 1,920 x 1,600 at 75 Hz. The EO2010 should please not only the average computer user but also high-end graphics users. With a superfine 0.25-millimeter dot pitch and rock-solid refresh rates, the EO2010 also includes BNC connectors for supreme connection quality. Though the footprint is long, it's one of the narrowest ones we've ever seen, sure to shoehorn onto cramped desktops. Colors are brilliant, the picture is crystal clear, and fonts are readable down to a tiny 6.8-dot pitch. Coupled with amazingly high refresh rates, the Princeton EO2010 will reduce the strain of spending long hours in front of your computer. On the downside, we did experience some color misconvergence near the edges of the screen that couldn't be corrected through the onscreen display. Also, the screen is a little more bulbous than most 21-inch monitors, which distorts the screen geometry somewhat. Fortunately, the onscreen controls let you adjust a host of monitor options, including vertical/horizontal moiré, convergence, and the rotation of the screen. Calibration controls are easy to navigate and quick to respond, making setting up and maintaining your display a snap. When all is said and done, there's not much to complain about. The Princeton EO2010 is a monitor sure to satisfy desktop publishers, Internet freaks, and multimedia wizards alike. --Dan Simpson Pros: - Astronomical resolutions at rock-solid refresh rates
- BNC connectors for hardcore graphics users
Cons: - Screen is slightly bulbous
- Slight color misconvergence near screen edges
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