nolovenohope
Senior member
- Nov 24, 2002
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Originally posted by: javabrak
I called Dell today, they said the monitors have been pushed back but no ETA yet. Did find Dell's web site detailing it:
Dell E207WFP Site
Originally posted by: SithSolo1
Originally posted by: javabrak
I called Dell today, they said the monitors have been pushed back but no ETA yet. Did find Dell's web site detailing it:
Dell E207WFP Site
Well looking at the 360 on that page it would seem that this monitor lacks the ability to adjust height or rotate...bummer.
Originally posted by: javabrak
I called Dell today, they said the monitors have been pushed back but no ETA yet. Did find Dell's web site detailing it:
Dell E207WFP Site
Originally posted by: Deleted member 139972
Dell E207WFP
Just heard about this on Engadget! Better yet, it supposed to have a USB Hub, DVI with HDCP, 5ms response time, Composite and S-Video.
Originally posted by: intogamer
Originally posted by: SithSolo1
Originally posted by: javabrak
I called Dell today, they said the monitors have been pushed back but no ETA yet. Did find Dell's web site detailing it:
Dell E207WFP Site
Well looking at the 360 on that page it would seem that this monitor lacks the ability to adjust height or rotate...bummer.
Dude what are you talking about? It has the same stand as the 2007wfp.
Look at the multi-window viewing section. The two background monitors are raised.
Originally posted by: Zstream
Originally posted by: Deleted member 139972
Dell E207WFP
Just heard about this on Engadget! Better yet, it supposed to have a USB Hub, DVI with HDCP, 5ms response time, Composite and S-Video.
awesome post just snagged one with a 20% off coupon.
250$ for a nice LCD = I love you
The difference has to do with color representation. An x-bit LCD monitor uses x bits to represent the brightness setting of a particular sub-pixel (each pixel is made of 3 sub-pixels, one for each of the 3 primary colors: red, green, and blue). This means that each sub-pixel can have 2^x possible settings or 2^3x possible colors (remember there are 3 sub-pixels) per pixel. So an 8-bit panel can be set to 16,777,216 possible colors and a 6-bit panel can be set to 262,144 possible colors.Originally posted by: AzNPinkTuv
whats teh diff? i know close to nothing with monitors
Originally posted by: intogamer
Some people got it around $209.XX shipped