Natural, vibrant colours without being garish, Large array of inputs, Massive configurability through the OSD
PIP mode not as comprehensive as it could be, Bundled calibration software has poor multi-monitor support
HPs LP2480zx is a sight to behold. Now if only we had a spare AU$4,200 kicking around... Tags: 24-inch | component | composite | dreamcolor | dvi | hdmi | hp | lp2480zx | s-video ...
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Published: 2009-04-28, Author: Richard , review by: pcworld.co.nz
Abstract: The DreamColor tag on the HP DreamColor LP2480zx – it appears only in marketing, and not on the monitor itself – comes from a collaboration between HP and SKG Dreamworks movie studio. The studio wanted a panel with a wide colour range and good lineari...
Abstract: It's not often you get to sit in front a PC display as complete as the HP DreamColor LP2480zx, but when you do you quickly gain an appreciation for what true quality looks like. Born through a partnership between HP and Dreamworks, the LP2480zx is billed ...
At almost £2,000, the HP DreamColor LP2480zx isn’t exactly a budget 24in monitor, and HP is taking on some tough competition from Eizo and NEC. The wider gamut and extra features give it a technical edge, but considering that a similarly specce...
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(70%)
Published: 2009-02-16, Author: Richard , review by: macworld.co.uk
High performance, wide gamut; tilt, swivel and rotate; robust build, effective OSD, multiple inputs, picture-in-picture
Expensive, stand hardware is slightly wobbly, OS X colour profile isn’t accurate, control software doesn’t support OS X (but isn’t essential)
Abstract: Developed with Dreamworks Animation, the DreamColor LP2480ZX is the first monitor to offer a 10-bit-per-colour output at a price that’s affordable to many creatives. The monitor’s colour range has increased from the 16 million colours of normal monito...