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HP LP3065 Black 30
- Performance: Very Good: 85
- Features: Fair: 69
- Design: Very Good: 89
| Performance | |
|---|---|
| DisplayMate Motion Test Result | Very Good |
| DVD Motion Test Result | Very Good |
| Gaming Motion Test Result | Very Good |
| Graphics Score | 84.1 |
| Horizontal Viewing Angle Test Result | 180 |
| Interface Tested | Digital |
| Refresh Rate Tested | 60 |
| Text Score | 85.5 |
What You Should Know about the LP3065 Black 30
Widescreen Monitor Offers Extra Viewing Space for HD Video, Gaming, and Work Apps
Widescreen displays such as this one have become more popular as people discover the benefits of the extra horizontal space for application palettes, viewing documents side by side, and for a more cinematic experience when watching movies or playing video games. This is a 16:10 widescreen display capable of displaying high-definition video, but it is a bit taller than the 16:09 aspect ratio found on most HDTVs, so some letterboxing will be necessary to fill the space above and below the video window.
User Reviews for HP LP3065 Black 30
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Reviewed by: alken64
Duration of ownership: 3 Months
Strengths: Huge viewing area, sharp text and crisp graphics.
Weaknesses: Colors are a overly brilliant, making this monitor's colors too unrealistic for photographers.
Overall Evaluation: Since the monitor has no color controls, you are limited to your video card's few adjustment features. You can reduce the color saturation on your photo collection by using a photo editor like Photoshop, but then the photos will look dull when viewed on a different monitor. The one plus to having overly brilliant colors is that it makes your XP or Vista desktop icons and gadgets really pop. Never-the-less, the real estate and super sharp text and graphics will outshine the problem of overly saturated colors for most people.
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Reviewed by: slickninja
Duration of ownership:
Strengths: Large real estate, relatively inexpensive, USB Hub, multiple inputs
Weaknesses: Overly bright, saturation is absurdly overdone (wide gamut), no OSD, Anti-glare coat gives the display a "dirty" look.
Overall Evaluation: Wide Gamut monitors in theory sound like a good thing, you get more color representation as the monitor tries to obtain displaying 96% of the Adobe RGB 1998 color profile as opposed 92%. Now that sounds nice, you get 4% more colors but the RGB data sent to a wide gamut display colorimetric's distance between any two colors is much larger. This means you gain more colors at the cost of less accuracy. Using the Delta E as the index for the color measurement, an RGB color of 240,250,200 and 240,250,201 would normally have a Delta E difference of about 1 on a regular LCD, 2 on a Adobe RGB display and on a wide gamut. That's a two fold increase on the Adobe RGB, and 4 on the standard. However, the OS, graphics card, Apps and so forth would all need to recognize this to make use of the colors accurately..So what does all this translate to? This display looks displays colors overly brilliantly. Remember the color setting on your old CRT TV? Its the same effect without the bleeding where the colors are unrealistic and eye fatiguing. The HP is no different. I stupidly ordered this instead of the 305T but found it unusable for motion graphics as it was too bright, too overblown and too inaccurate. As a motion graphics editor I don't demand the same precision as my print media friends do but I do want a display I can stare at for hours and displays the colors well. THe 3065 is NOT that display. .I've used several 30 inch displays. To this day the 305T has been my favorite. I'm boxing this and sending it back. With OS X, there's simply no hardware controls for nVidia but even in windows this display is disgustingly overdone. .Of course you can listen to all the positive reviews, but if you value accuracy at all this is not the display for you. .One strange feature that's welcome but totally unnecessary is the 3065 sports 3 inputs. Seeing that the display cannot do scaling it will not double as an HDTV. It will only accept 1280 x 800 or 2560 x 1600.
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