Philips 276E6ADSS review
Philips 276E6ADSS review
Welcome to a Biomedical Battery specialist of the Philips Battery
One of the trickiest aspects of recommending a monitor is variation in user needs. Gamers want responsive displays with high refresh rates, while photo editors need perfect color reproduction and deep contrast. The Philips 276E6 falls towards the latter example, boasting a quoted 99 percent AdobeRGB gamut.
Despite that promise, the monitor’s $300 price is reasonable, though it makes more sense once you realize the 27-inch display only achieves 1080p resolution. Philips will have to prove there’s room for another 1080p monitor in today’s increasingly high-resolution market.
To do that, the company has turned towards quantum dots, a relatively new technology that can drastically improve an LCD display’s gamut and color accuracy. We’ve seen it in action several times, and always came away impressed – and previous examples, like Asus’ Zenbook NX500, were extraordinarily expensive. Does this monitor bring quantum dots to everyone?
This monitor with battery like Philips A3 Battery, Philips M3516A Battery, Philips M4735A Battery, Philips ME202C Battery, Philips Pagewriter 100 Battery, Philips Pagewriter 200 Battery, Philips Pagewriter 300 Battery, Philips Suresign VS2 Battery, Philips Suresign VS3 Battery, Philips Suresign VM4 Battery, Philips Suresign VM6 Battery, Philips Suresign VM8 Battery doesn’t look like most we’ve reviewed. Its bezel, while not the thinnest, is sleek semi-gloss white, a unique color choice in a market populated almost entirely by nondescript black and gray plastic. The stand is a champagne ring that sticks straight down off the back of the display, although Philips says it will be silver in the final North American version.
It looks sleek, but that doesn’t mean it works well. The single post that ties the stand and display itself together doesn’t have a wide point of connection, so the monitor looks like it’s floating – not because of the stand’s design, but because of how the display bobs and tilts when slightly disturbed. Ergonomic features are limited, as well, as the stand only adjusts for tilt. A VESA mount is not included.
And there’s more bad news. The monitor’s plastic panels bend in places they really shouldn’t, like the front bezel, or the back of the case near any edge. It’s particularly concerning in the former, where the panel itself bends when pushing on the bezel at the bottom, which may be the cause of a backlight bright spot we saw near the bottom of the panel. This monitor doesn’t feel like it’s built for the long haul.
The 276E6 is a 1080p display with a 60Hz refresh rate, so the VGA, HDMI, and DVI inputs offered will be sufficient for most users. There’s also a 3.5mm audio out to pass the HDMI audio signal through, since the Philips lack any speakers of its own.

0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home