There's a slight yellow cast as well, which added warmth to photos but meant colours were a little inaccurate. This meant that contrast suffered, and detail was lost in very bright or dark areas. Unlike the majority of new screens here, the F22+ uses a CCFL backlight, which we found uneven and comparatively dim compared to the latest LED displays. The monitor supports HDCP, so you can connect HDMI devices, such as a Blu-ray player using an HDMI-to-DVI adaptor. This model has a VGA and, unlike the similar F22s+, DVI inputs. This means it sits lower than most of the other screens here.Īpart from limiting the height of the screen, this design doesn't seem to have any major drawbacks, and the F22+ can still be wall-mounted using the standard VESA mount on the rear. Fortunately, it doesn't look cheap thanks to its unusual design: instead of having a stand, it sits on a long bar slung underneath the screen, and leans back on a rubber-tipped "foot" whose length can be adjusted by screwing or unscrewing it. AOC's F22+ is just about the cheapest Full HD 22in monitor that we've ever seen.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |