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The Samsung SyncMaster 970P is a 19-inch analog and digital TFT/PVA-LCD monitor delivering crisp, clean text and bright, vivid colors. This display offers a fast response time of 6 ms (G to G), 1000:1 contrast ratio, 250 cd/m2 brightness, 1280 x 1024 resolution, 178/178 degree viewing angle, scanning frequency of 30-81 kHz horizontal and 56-75 Hz vertical and 0.294mm pixel pitch. This unique display offers Samsung’s proprietary MagicTuneTM software with asset management for a truly hands-free experience and MagicBrightTM technology for enhanced viewing by application along with MagicColor™ and MagicZone™. The SyncMaster 970P also features MagicRotation™ for rotating from landscape to portrait viewing. It also features MagicStand™ that has a triple hinge with swivel, tilt, pivot and height adjustable capabilities. Available in white, the SyncMaster 970P delivers a maximum of 16.7 million colors.. To ensure years of reliable performance, the SyncMaster 970P is backed by a three-year parts and labor warranty, including the backlight.
Features
* Full 19 inch viewable screen
* 1000:1 contrast ratio
* Supports both digital and analog inputs
* 1280 x 1024 max resolution
* 0.294mm pixel pitch
* PC/Windows, Macintosh, Sun Microsystems compatible
* 3 year warranty
Review By Supergooddeal
The Samsung SyncMaster 970P 19″ LCD monitor is ready to deliver crisp text and vivid colors. The 970P offers a 1000:1 contrast ratio, 6 ms (grey to grey) response time and a 1280 x 1024 resolution to give you a beautiful display everytime. The SyncMaster 970P comes with MagicTune, MagicColor, and MagicBright II technologies to ensure rich colors, perfect text, and sharper images. Complete with analog and digital inputs and VESA wall mount compatible, the 970P will create an enriched multimedia experience. The powerful SyncMaster 970P will bring your PC to life.
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Review By Reviews.Cnet
The Samsung SyncMaster 970P combines excellent performance with a uniquely clean design. The monitor’s bezel has no buttons of any sort, and the connections, typically located on the back of the panel, have been exiled to a separate block that’s connected to the monitor by a lone cord. This arrangement gives the 970P a very simple look, with just one visible cable and no other visual distractions, but it makes adjusting the picture somewhat more complicated. At $549, the SyncMaster 970P is expensive, though we think its top-notch performance, flexibility, and design are worth the price. If you’re looking for less expensive 19-inch LCDs that offer similar performance, though far less style and flexibility, check out the Sony SDM-X95KB or the Philips Brilliance 190P6.
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Review By Tweaknews
The everyday consumer usually has their first taste of LCD monitor viewing while visiting a friends house or browsing the computer product isle at your local electronics store. Like me, when you first try them out, you are hooked. You will be amazed as to just how small the monitor is and lets not forget the picture. Putting a CRT monitor and an equivalent LCD monitor side to side with the same picture will be like sitting at the beach and having your mother stand beside a bikini model. Not a pretty sight is it, and when you view this in person (the monitors silly), you will see what I am talking about. The picture quality on a LCD monitor is so much sharper, brighter, and let’s not forget the vibrant color reproduction.
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Review By Hardwarecentral
The Samsung is also strikingly attractive, in an inevitable-allusions-to-Apple way: Besides a bezel just under an inch thin, it sports a handsome silver-gray and white color scheme, with a square white base accented by a glowing blue (when switched on) power button front and center.
And that’s the only button on the monitor. All other controls such as screen brightness, contrast, and centering are handled by Samsung’s MagicTune software (for Windows or Mac, not for Linux), which pops up from a Windows Taskbar icon to present several menus of point-and-click settings, as well as a detailed calibration utility with test-pattern and color-matching screens for fussy desktop publishers.
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Posted on October 29th, 2006 Written by: PCMAN
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