Read more.But this entry-level FreeSync curved VA screen is 1080p with 250nits max brightness.
Read more.But this entry-level FreeSync curved VA screen is 1080p with 250nits max brightness.
38", 1080p and 250 nits. That's pathetic. No more than £150-£170 or it's just stupid.
Great for playing minesweeper at high FPS!
FHD ? seriously ?
1920 x 1080??? Eugh!
57ppi? Yuk. No thanks.
This looked interesting, until I saw the resolution...
Give them a break people, the article does say "Philips has quietly released", so I don't think they're claiming anything here. If it's a budget monitor, why not! But this seems like it's quite late when people are already looking at 1440p (+144hz) minimum.
If this was 1440 or 4k this would be something I'd personally keep an eye on..
Nothing against Philips. I'm sure it'll sell quite well, to people who don't care (or understand) about screen resolution/pixel density, and just want a big screen.
It just seems an usually large monitor to offer at only 1080p. The pixel density is barely half that of a 27" 1440p panel.
I wonder how it handles ghosting. I've got a curved Panasonic 40" 4K VA panel and it ghosts terribly, plus the viewing angles aren't fantastic.
To put that in to context - the Nokia 3310 had a higher density at 64.5ppi.
https://pixensity.com/search/?search=
dannyboy75 (21-11-2019)
1080p geee not good for that size. pass
Not the best resolution but could be a good cheap large monitor if they price it right
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