Dell UltraSharp U2412M 24-Inch Screen LED-lit Monitor
Product Details
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Product
Dimensions: 21.9 x 20.2 x 7.1 inches ; 17 pounds
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Shipping: This item is also available for shipping to select countries outside
the U.S.
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ASIN: B005JN9310
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Item model
number: Dell UltraSharp
U2412
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Amazon Best
Sellers Rank:
Electronics > Accessories & Supplies > Computer Accessories > Monitor Accessories
Electronics > Computers & Add-Ons > Monitors
Electronics > Computers & Add-Ons > Monitors
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Date first
available at Amazon.com: July
22, 2011
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Product Description Amazon.com
DellUltraSharp U2412M 24" Monitor
Great performance, no matter how you look at it
Enjoy widescreen performance, any way you want it. With a
24", IPS technology and LED backlight, the U2412M provides a brilliant
view, plus amazing adjustability to suit any style.
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Powerful: Experience IPS technology, featuring a
wide viewing angle with high-quality color representation for a peerless
viewing experience.
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Flexible: Pick the view that works best for you
with an almost unlimited range of tilt, swivel, pivot and height adjustments.
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Customizable: Change your energy usage settings, text
brightness and color temperature with the touch of a button to help conserve
energy with this eco-designed arsenic-free and mercury-free panel.
It's okay
to stare.
Whether for
work or for play, the Dell UltraSharp™ U2412M can deliver an unmatched viewing
experience.
Clearly
outstanding: Watch your graphics come to life on a
vast 24" (61cm) LED-backlit screen featuring a crystal-clear 1920x1200
resolution on a 16:10 widescreen aspect ratio so you can't lose screen area
just because your customized applications support a different resolution.
Contrasting
view: Get ready for blur-free viewing with 2 million:1 (typical) high
dynamic contrast ratio and 8ms with overdrive gray-to-gray (typical) response
time that helps ensure crisp, sharp and ghost-free images.
Colorful
character: Enjoy an amazing range of rich,
dramatic and accurate colors, thanks to IPS technology designed to give you
color consistency across a broad viewing angle and a wide color gamut at 82%
(typical).
Premium
Panel Guarantee: 100% replacement of Dell UltraSharp
series monitors sold if any bright pixel is found, valid within the warranty
period.
Your
monitor, your style.
The
ultimate in flexibility and customizability, the U2412M monitor can be adjusted
to suit your workspace, tailored to suit your viewing preferences, and with its
wide viewing angle, it can be viewed from almost any position.
Height
adjustability: Raise or lower the U2412M to suit your
workspace and your personal style with height adjustability.
Versatile
connectivity: Connect a keyboard, mouse and other
peripherals via USB ports, DisplayPort and DVI ports that can deliver
outstanding image quality when viewing HD content.
Maximum
flexibility: Position your monitor just the way you
like with comfort-enabling features like tilt, swivel and rotate. IPS (in-plane
switching) technology helps ensure a great view from almost any angle.
Supreme
adaptability: Make colors cooler or warmer to suit
your preference with the color temperature slider, while 'Text mode'
automatically adjusts screen brightness to 150 nits, ideal or reading text.
People found the following review helpful
This review is from: Dell UltraSharp U2412M 24-Inch Screen LED-lit
Monitor (Personal Computers)
First off, please
ignore all the comments about not for photography or it lacks the full color
spectrum and all the complaints about the anti-glare coating. I will say right
off the bat that yes you can see the coating but really only if your screen is
showing pure white. It isn't as bad as most people say though. I like to call
it the "Twilight Effect(tm)", it is a small rainbow shimmer that
appears when your monitor is showing bright colors. It's not a strong shimmer
and really only shows if you are up really close and are shifting viewing
angles. However this coating does do a wonderful job at preventing any sort of
reflections or shine even in super bright light which for me is a way better
trade off because if you get glare it is going to be way more obvious and
disruptive then a little "Twilight Effect(tm)" on your screen. If
you're ever in a room with windows, in an office with bright lights, or even if
you're ever mobile then glare will be far more of an issue than this shimmer
will be. However if you're a graphics guy or something similar and never plan
to have your monitor see the light of day in fear that it will melt under the
bright sun rays (in true vampire style)then sure go get yourself one of those
super shiny glass covered Apple displays.
As for all the ""Professional Photographers" that keep complaining about the color spectrum of this monitor, I must ask you why you are looking at an entry level budget IPS panel for you exactly matched color spectrum? You seriously think you are going to have a $300 monitor that will be able to display photos taken with your $3,000 lens. You're just looking in the completely wrong place with this one. You are going to have to do like you did for all that fancy Canon of Nikon gear and just bend over and take it and pay $1,000+ for a truly accurate professional level monitor. Seriously you didn't skimp out on any of your camera gear so don't skip out on your monitor either. I know there are a couple good ones around the $500 or so range but the true pro models that meet all standards are really expensive.
For all of you amateur/semi-pro photogs, this would include anyone that doesn't plan to print or intends to print at the drug store, this also includes anyone sharing your photos on a web site or saving images as jpg, png, or gifs, this means anyone that isn't shooting on a DSLR and with all the high end fancy settings options set or even if you are shooting on a DSLR but really only with your kit lens because it zooms to any focal distance you would ever dream of using, basically this means that 90% or more of users are either never going to get the chance to notice a difference or are just not going to really care enough to pay double the price for a monitor that can show more colors but no one else will see them unless you print them on a calibrated cmyk printer. As for everyone else on earth if you do happen to have gear that can work in these color ranges just remember that if you are not setting everything correctly along the entire process then it isn't going to make a difference. Or if you are going to share your digital images with basically anyone on earth then those missing spectrum colors won't matter. Not only will not show for them but it will actually mute and wash out the colors and if will look worse than ever.
If your someone who does photography as a hobby or on a small level or only digitally, if you edit your own videos or web shows, if you want something that will display way more colors while watching your dvds and blue rays and you don't want to sell a kidney to do it then this monitor is one of the best out there. If all of this same stuff applies but the 1920x1200 (16:10) isn't important to you and you are perfectly fine with 1920x1080 (16:9) then take a look at the ASUS PA Series PA238Q or the cheapest and nicest looking of the all the AOC I2353PH. They are both also very highly rated IPS panels for cheap. Just remember if you plan on doing video editing that the extra 120 lines of vertical pixels in the Dell monitor means you can view your footage full HD and still have a time scrub/ tool bar at the bottom of the screen.
Anyway before you can really make a good decision takes a little bit of time to think how you are going to use your monitor the most and then find something that fits your needs. Don't bash a monitor (really anything) because it doesn't do what you want it to do. That would be more your fault for looking in the wrong place or not spending the time to make sure it will suit your needs. If you open a box and you pick up your item and it falls apart well then that is something to complain about but deducting a star because a monitor doesn't have an HDMI port and you need an HDMI just means you did a really crappy job at reading the specifications line in the product listing. Seriously though you are obviously already online and it's not like they are hiding facts about their monitor to hope to dupe you into thinking it will have an HDMI port when it really won't (OH I can just hear the maniacal laughter now). Well anyway if you are not a professional and you want something that's still fairly high end yet still affordable then you won't be disappointed with the quality of this monitor and color of this monitor once you set it up properly.
As for all the ""Professional Photographers" that keep complaining about the color spectrum of this monitor, I must ask you why you are looking at an entry level budget IPS panel for you exactly matched color spectrum? You seriously think you are going to have a $300 monitor that will be able to display photos taken with your $3,000 lens. You're just looking in the completely wrong place with this one. You are going to have to do like you did for all that fancy Canon of Nikon gear and just bend over and take it and pay $1,000+ for a truly accurate professional level monitor. Seriously you didn't skimp out on any of your camera gear so don't skip out on your monitor either. I know there are a couple good ones around the $500 or so range but the true pro models that meet all standards are really expensive.
For all of you amateur/semi-pro photogs, this would include anyone that doesn't plan to print or intends to print at the drug store, this also includes anyone sharing your photos on a web site or saving images as jpg, png, or gifs, this means anyone that isn't shooting on a DSLR and with all the high end fancy settings options set or even if you are shooting on a DSLR but really only with your kit lens because it zooms to any focal distance you would ever dream of using, basically this means that 90% or more of users are either never going to get the chance to notice a difference or are just not going to really care enough to pay double the price for a monitor that can show more colors but no one else will see them unless you print them on a calibrated cmyk printer. As for everyone else on earth if you do happen to have gear that can work in these color ranges just remember that if you are not setting everything correctly along the entire process then it isn't going to make a difference. Or if you are going to share your digital images with basically anyone on earth then those missing spectrum colors won't matter. Not only will not show for them but it will actually mute and wash out the colors and if will look worse than ever.
If your someone who does photography as a hobby or on a small level or only digitally, if you edit your own videos or web shows, if you want something that will display way more colors while watching your dvds and blue rays and you don't want to sell a kidney to do it then this monitor is one of the best out there. If all of this same stuff applies but the 1920x1200 (16:10) isn't important to you and you are perfectly fine with 1920x1080 (16:9) then take a look at the ASUS PA Series PA238Q or the cheapest and nicest looking of the all the AOC I2353PH. They are both also very highly rated IPS panels for cheap. Just remember if you plan on doing video editing that the extra 120 lines of vertical pixels in the Dell monitor means you can view your footage full HD and still have a time scrub/ tool bar at the bottom of the screen.
Anyway before you can really make a good decision takes a little bit of time to think how you are going to use your monitor the most and then find something that fits your needs. Don't bash a monitor (really anything) because it doesn't do what you want it to do. That would be more your fault for looking in the wrong place or not spending the time to make sure it will suit your needs. If you open a box and you pick up your item and it falls apart well then that is something to complain about but deducting a star because a monitor doesn't have an HDMI port and you need an HDMI just means you did a really crappy job at reading the specifications line in the product listing. Seriously though you are obviously already online and it's not like they are hiding facts about their monitor to hope to dupe you into thinking it will have an HDMI port when it really won't (OH I can just hear the maniacal laughter now). Well anyway if you are not a professional and you want something that's still fairly high end yet still affordable then you won't be disappointed with the quality of this monitor and color of this monitor once you set it up properly.
I purchased this
monitor 2 months ago. I am amazed at how crisp and clear the picture is. I had
my son calibrate the monitor and he said it really performed well - better than
his Dell 2010 model IPS screen. The controls are easy to use and the monitor
looks great for movies. I mainly use it for Photoshop CS5 and I love having the
extra screen space that 1920x1200 has. I am amazed at how sturdy the
stand/build is. My old Samsung monitor creaks and woobles. This thing is a rock.
Overall... great monitor fair price.
Overall... great monitor fair price.
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