Samsung SyncMaster 940BF 19" LCD
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Author:
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Anthony Fiti
Anthony
Samsung
Jul. 4, 2006
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First Looks
The Samsung SyncMaster 940BF comes in two pieces: a round base unit and the vertical support to which the LCD is attached. Assembly is simple and no tools are required, you simply put the stand in the base unit and screw the base into the vertical support. The next item in the box is a stack of papers - from the quick setup guide to registration and warranty information, all in several languages. Samsung provides a three year parts and labor warranty with the display.
There is also a bundled CD which contains a few different things: display profile for the SyncMaster 940BF, calibration software which is discussed later, electronic copy of the manual, and some pivot software which isn't very useful since this monitor doesn't pivot. A VGA and DVI cable are included with the monitor as well as a power cable. It's nice to see that the transformer unit is located within the LCD housing, because that means there's no power brick dangling from the power cord.
     
There are five buttons at the bottom of the LCD that operate the OSD (on-screen display), as well as the power switch which glows a nice blue color when it is operational. When the monitor goes into standby mode, the blue LED will blink on and off.
The inputs are located on the rear of the Samsung SyncMaster 940BF, behind a removable panel designed to hide the connections. The panel comes off easily when you pull on the indicated areas, but if you pull in the wrong spot, the panel wont budge. Behind this panel are the power, DVI and VGA connections. There are no other inputs (S-Video, Composite, etc.) on this unit.
          
Page 1: Introduction
Page 2: First Looks
Page 3: Setup & Testing
Page 4: Conclusion
1 - Posted by
twenty3sky
on February 2, 2007 - 11:24 pm
I love the cons of this article. In other words it doesn't have a lot of extra crap. As a product designer, one of the first things we are taught in school is make your product do one thing and do it well. That is exact;y what this monitor does. 2000:1 contrast 2ms response time... what else can you ask for... Oh yeah 269 at bestBuy...
2 - Posted by
Brian
on February 3, 2007 - 12:04 pm
I know where you're coming from twenty3sky. If you need a monitor to just do its main job of displaying a picture from one input, then hey, that's great. My previous monitor was like that. I bought it a couple years ago and it was awesome, and all it had was a VGA input. That's all I really needed too.
Recently, I got a Dell 2007wfp so now I have some of these extra doodads like multiple inputs and USB connections... and I am really happy with the monitor. Not only does it do its job well, but the multiple inputs is great for connecting my desktop and my laptop without having to switch cables around, plus a TV-in would be great if using your computer as a media center PC (assuming you didn't have a TV tuner in your computer). The USB ports on the side of my monitor are awesome too. I can quickly connect my portable devices without bending down to reach my computer or behind it. It really depends on what you need it for, and in the author's opinion, that 'extra crap' can be quite handy.
What you're saying works sometimes, but not all the time. Let's use cars for example: If cars were only made to do their job, to get you from one place to another, they wouldn't have all this extra crap like airbags, air conditioning, stereos, etc. I don't know about you, but I like to be comfortable while I'm going from point A to point B.
3 - Posted by
Kurtis
on February 4, 2007 - 1:53 am
I'd like to pick up where Brian left off, regarding special features and cars... what I really like is how on my Camaro there is this "spin-out-into-a-ditch-from-th e-highway-in-the-rain" mode, which as it turns out isn't something you can really disable. Though installing new tires has gone a long way to supress this annoying feature.
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I4U Aug. 24, 2008 - 2:46 am
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