Posts Tagged ‘v2400w’

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BenQ V2400W LCD Monitor reviews.

July 4, 2008

The BenQ V2400W is the fourth 24-inch LCD we’ve reviewed this year and the third we’d recommend. The $600 is the priciest of the spray but offers the most connections and brightest image. The is nearly $200 cheaper than the Dell and skimps on features but not demeanour to hit its rude price. (The ’s lackluster dispatch keeps it off our shortlist.) The BenQ V2400W is comparable in price, performance, and features to the V7 D24W33 but boasts a sleeker point and an additional video connection.

Only the lack of adjustment options give us pause. You may straits to prop the monitor on a phone book to get it at the right height on your desk, but if such an order doesn’t bother you, you’ll find a lot to like about the sleek and cheap–it lists for $499, but can be found online for as speck as $399–BenQ V2400W. Design When we took the 24-inch BenQ V2400W out of its box, the firstly thing that caught our eye was its light gray foot stand.

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Review: Benq V2400W 24in TFT monitor.

June 27, 2008

Until recently, displays of 24in or more in range were disposed to to be seen only on the desks of those with plenty of money to spend and who were prepared to put up with the thick, the cumbersome and the distastefully functional. Even since the advent of lower-cost 24in TN-based panels, one of which is used in the V2400W, the more consumer-friendly expense of such screens has not been matched with the kind of looks we’re happy to live with in the home. The V2400W is something new. Rather than dominating your desk, it manages to last the same scan dimensions while maintaining a slim, lightweight look and has a casing only 24mm thick at the edges.

With its philosophy mounted off-centre, the display has a dynamic look, emphasising the lightness of the panel itself. It’s a very good-looking grandeur that looks much better in the flesh than the promotional photographs would suggest and its touch-sensitive controls enlarge its elegant design. Benq has included VGA, DVI and HDMI inputs, together with circumstance ratio and 1:1 scaling options that ensure any video source is shown to its best effect. There are no built-in speakers, but any audio passed through the HDMI telegram is available at a side-mounted headphone socket. With a rated put out of 250 cd/m2, this isn’t the brightest display we’ve seen, although it’s more than middling for most desktop use.

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BenQ V2400W 24in LCD monitor.

May 25, 2008

Like our computers, which went from flat beige boxes to shiny LED-lit designer machines, monitors have become ever more style conscious. But without considering some real stunners making their way through the TR offices, LCD monitors that focus first of all on looks are still an emerging market. Perhaps the most successful example of such a monitor to date is , and the convention doesn’t look to be letting up, with its gorgeous series stealing quite a few headlines and hearts.

One visitor you would not necessarily associate with eye-catching looks is BenQ, but that might be set to change, because its V2400W under assessment today is probably the most attractive 24in monitor we have ever seen. And BenQ is not modest about its acquisition either. In its marketing, it refers to things like “magic through unexpected asymmetry”. It has even come up with a unheard of category of design; Kinergy-Design, setting a “new trend in the world of design which is found between minimalism and luxury: simple, yet extraordinary”.

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Benq V2400W 24in asymmetric widescreen LCD monitor.

April 26, 2008

has announced the momentary float of its asymmetric V200W 24in widescreen LCD monitor. Retailing for around €449 including VAT, the Benq V2400W wall has a response time of 2 milliseconds and is aimed at refuge users who want the best possible home viewing experience. A DVI (digital visual interconnect) and D-Sub ports present both digital and analog connections while high-definition is catered for via an HDMI port. The means where one lives users will be able to hook up the Benq V2400W to a Blu-ray player such as the Sony Playstation 3 as well as to an Xbox 360 or their HD laptop. describes the V2400W as “highly appropriate as a approve monitor for connecting games consoles, hard disk recorders or notebooks to budget a larger image and working area for stationary work”.

The asymmetric design – in which the controls are on the soften lefthand side of the monitor cabinet and the supporting stand is positioned utter of centre – are intended to make the Benq display an eye-catching and attractive part of a profoundly entertainment setup. At its thickest point, the V2400W is just 6mm thick. Onsale from the end of April, Benq expects the 24in V2400W cull to sell for around €449 (£359). For curvaceous details, see.

home users

Esteemed opinion article: here

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BenQ Rolls Out Worlds Slimmest LCD. Benq.

April 4, 2008

The V2400W uses HDMI with HDCP, DVI-D and VGA inputs that tender future-proof HD connectivity as well as compatibility. BenQ’s proprietary Senseye + photo Human Vision Technology provides vividly realistic, true-to-life colours and five preset modes – Dynamic, Photo, Standard, Movie and sRGB – are designed to clear up the optimised viewing at the with of a button. The V2400W is also NSTL-compliant for noteworthy shade exactitude consistent from monitor to printer to digital camera to any visual device. The V2400W’s 4000:1 Dynamic Contrast Ratio additionally intensifies swart to immature levels, revealing even the subtlest dark details in extraordinary limpidity and precision. And for displaying video in crisp, clean detail free of blur and ghosting, the V2400W incorporates BenQ’s Advanced Motion Accelerator Technology (AMA) for a 2 ms GTG answer time.

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BenQ V2400W: Slim LCD Monitor for Design Freaks. Benq.

March 28, 2008

There are a lot of tastefulness and smart looking monitors. The Taiwanese manufacturer BenQ has now presented one make model separately from their already elegant series of , which includes such sleek specimens as the. This check gets attention from and designers all over the world and has a good chance of spending life in a originate museum after it has outlived its functionality.

V2400W is the understated name for the set to dust off some prices in the coming months. It is also the elementary model from the new BenQ series of devices with Kinergy design. What does the survey do differently? Good design works with minimum means. In this manner the ’s stand, which is typically located in the middle, has been shifted to the right. To residue out this change, all the essential buttons and keys are located on the left.

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Productwise: World’s slimmest LCD; futuristic non-professional kitchen. Benq.

March 24, 2008

With the freedom of its new V2400W premium LCD display, BenQ not only debuts the world’s slimmest 24″ widescreen LCD monitor, but creates a fresh lifestyle trend in computer armament design that targets the sophisticated, stylish consumer. The V2400W received the iF Design Award, a acknowledgement of outstanding design. Combining unexpected asymmetry and the aerodynamic curves of the B-2 furtiveness bomber, the V2400W is the world’s first glimpse into BenQ’s newly-evolved Kinergy Design. An overall mirror-black finale highlights the monitor’s premium status. The V2400W is only 2.44 inches at its thickest point, making it the world’s thinnest 24″ widescreen LCD - more than 21% slimmer than the next thinnest LCD monitor.

It will be at one’s fingertips by March-end in China and Asia and by April in Europe and North America. Whirlpool unveils futuristic untested caboose Whirlpool has unveiled its futuristic “green kitchen” concept in which 60% of the deuterium oxide and heat generated from appliances is “diverted” to nourish other appliances or functions in the eco-kitchen. Through this integrated use of appliances, with the concept bewitching its model from the cycle of nature, it optimises the use of heat and water with processes that increase energy efficaciousness up to 70%. For example, the kitchen allows you to use the heat produced by the fridge compressor, the only appliance to direct 24 hours a day, to produce hot water for the dishwasher. Simple changes devise a difference too - the refrigerator also uses a fridge “drawer”, instead of the normal cabinet.

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In a hysterical spot of PR blurb, the company assures us it will, ‘create a unexplored lifestyle trend in computer hardware design that targets the sophisticated, stylish consumer’. Benq.

March 22, 2008

» Meet The AVR Team Psst! Ever wondered who’s behind all of AVReview’s glittering content? Well, click for the lowdown on our writers… BenQ V2400W By New from BenQ as part of its Kinergy draw range is the V2400W premium LCD display, released in Taiwan to claims it is the world’s slimmest 24in widescreen monitor. In a funny quarter of PR blurb, the company assures us it will, ‘create a new lifestyle head in computer hardware design that targets the sophisticated, stylish consumer’. Er, yeah, sure.

On a roll, it goes on to nearly that the display achieves the ‘unexpected asymmetry and the aerodynamic curves of the B-2 furtiveness bomber’. Crikey. To give credit, it’s undeniably a looker and has won the iF Design Award, but clandestineness bombers and unexpected asymmetry…? Down to business then and it offers Full HD 1080p pics with a 4,000:1 forceful contrast ratio and touch controls. It’s also only 2.44in at its thickest point.

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BenQ Claims World’s Thinnest 24. Benq.

March 20, 2008

Taiwan’s has announced its , which the associates is not only claiming is the world’s thinnest array in its size range (measuring just 2.4 inches at its thickest) but establishes computer equipment as “the newest art form” with its “unexpected” asymmetry and airplane-inspired curves. “The V2400W is inspired by the B2 furtiveness bomber, evoking a suspect of mystery, awe and the elite” said BenQ Lifestyle Design Center’s Manfred Wang, in a statement.

“In addition, the display’s asymmetry exemplifies our reborn design philosophy. One is captivated by its suspended energy, with a bun in the oven the screen to tilt. But it stands still, as if while were frozen and the movement paused.

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