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Philips Intros BDM3275UP 32-inch 4K Ultra HD Monitor

btarunr

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Philips introduced the BDM3275UP 32-inch monitor, offering 4K Ultra HD (3840 x 2160 pixels) resolution. It embeds an IPS-AHVA panel, with 178°/178° viewing angles, 350 cd/m² maximum brightness, dynamic mega-contrast ratio, and 30-bit color (1.07 billion colors). The display takes input from HDMI 2.0, DisplayPort 1.2, and dual-link DVI. A headphones output (putting out audio from the HDMI/DP audio channels), and a 4-port USB 3.0 hub make for the rest of its feature-set. The company didn't reveal pricing or availability.



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30-bit colour?! :O
 
If is 500$ Ill buy it.
 
USB 3.1 ? Type-C ?

But I'm just wondering, when we will see 5K 21:9 ( which means 5120×2160 ), currently only LG and Samsung have such resolution and only on a 105" Curved TV !!
 
Throw in G-sync and I'm sold.
 
10-bit per channel instead of 8-bit. Many professional displays have this feature.
Ah ok. That makes sense now.
 
throw in Freesync and a refresh rate beyond 60 and im sold
 
Please make it 42" - I'll buy it.
 
There allready exists a 4k IPS 32inch freesync monitor on sale right now. Made by Samsung.
 
Calm down gamers - nobody needs 10-bit per channel colors in games - games color saturation is beyond "Disney movie" level (you do not need extra finesse in colors there)... it would be like asking gourmet chef to make you fast food.... if you are hungry take a BigMac (much better choice) - but do strive not mix those two you will only get the worst of both worlds (not the best) - youi will get a crappy meal that costs you fortune! And do not strive for photo/design professional (kind a) type of features to do games and streamed videos that will nuke and twist all your colors anyway.
 
throw in Freesync and a refresh rate beyond 60 and im sold

how are are they going to get 120hz 4K to the screen? Double DP cables?...

neat idea, use two GPU's with a cable from each to allow 120 Hz 4k... (Or Two DP ports on the same card)



while the nec PA322UHD does not have 120Hz at 4k, it does have 120Hz at 1080p. But because it is a PRO monitor, it is setup to allow perfect calabration, not for gaming speed... (Meaning that the input lag/display response is over 16ms... )

And you need 10bit color because i hate the banding in the sky at night in GTAV...
 
how are are they going to get 120hz 4K to the screen? Double DP cables?...

neat idea, use two GPU's with a cable from each to allow 120 Hz 4k... (Or Two DP ports on the same card)



while the nec PA322UHD does not have 120Hz at 4k, it does have 120Hz at 1080p. But because it is a PRO monitor, it is setup to allow perfect calabration, not for gaming speed... (Meaning that the input lag/display response is over 16ms... )

And you need 10bit color because i hate the banding in the sky at night in GTAV...

sure double cables, just like that early Asus 4k monitor did from the start or lets not for get I just said about 60, not insandly 120hz. Just 75Hz would already be a good thing
 
10-bit per channel instead of 8-bit. Many professional displays have this feature.

My HDTV is 10bit :), but this is to small want a 40" at least. Still seems to soon to buy in to all this still.
 
But I'm just wondering, when we will see 5K 21:9 ( which means 5120×2160 ), currently only LG and Samsung have such resolution and only on a 105" Curved TV !!

Probably never since that isn't a industry standard resolution. Everyone is moving towards 5120x2880, true 5k. Though I think even that is going to be largely skipped except on expensive professional monitors. We'll sit stagnant at 4k, just like we did with 1080p, until 8k comes around. They'll probably be a few niche products in between, but I doubt they'll be affordable or even worth buying.

how are are they going to get 120hz 4K to the screen? Double DP cables?...

DP1.3 can handled 4k@120Hz with a single cable.
 
Probably never since that isn't a industry standard resolution. Everyone is moving towards 5120x2880, true 5k. Though I think even that is going to be largely skipped except on expensive professional monitors. We'll sit stagnant at 4k, just like we did with 1080p, until 8k comes around. They'll probably be a few niche products in between, but I doubt they'll be affordable or even worth buying.



DP1.3 can handled 4k@120Hz with a single cable.

yeah but this monitor does not have DP1.3
 
and you need 10bit color because i hate the banding in the sky at night in GTAV...
you need the game to support more bits first of all, i have seen many games use textures or other shortcuts that result in worse than 8bit (sometimes due to texture compression formats, other times due to post processing... you get similar issues with levels in photoshop)

but more importantly, dithering really really helps... anyone doing after effects or 3d CG motion graphics has likely run into the same issue when using very small gradients
 
yeah but this monitor does not have DP1.3

It also doesn't do 4k at anything beyond 60Hz. The question was simply how would you get the signal to the monitor if it did support higher refresh rates, and DP1.3 is the answer.
 
10-bit per channel instead of 8-bit. Many professional displays have this feature.

4k content has been established as 4k 10-bit Rec. 2020 minimal.

Any 4k monitor/TV that doesn't support those is just a resolution increase.
 
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