Anyone has got/used/using this monitor?
For all your comments & sharing.
Thank you.![]()
basically, it is not suitable for gaming, internet, TV (starhub digital cable, some color will blink and resolution is too higher for TV)
if you are a trader, media designer, programmer, then it is ideal for you.
watch movie also can but you need sit far away, cannot keep the same distance as normal pc monitor, otherwise you view cannot cover the whole screen
i think sometime dell will provide 5 years extended warranty for this model. just wait and buy.
Can't hurt when it is only going for 1799 what![]()
I'm not rich. But a 30" for 1799, are you telling me that's expensive? Granted, it's not like anyone can afford it, but go to any shop selling LCDs, tell me if you can find one that is equivalent to 30" for that price.
If u check the Sat papers, Branded 32" LCD TV lower than $1799..
DellTM 30" 3007WFP UltraSharpTM Widescreen Flat Panel Monitorwhat's the resolution of this monitor?
DellTM 30" 3007WFP UltraSharpTM Widescreen Flat Panel Monitor
2560x1600 at 60 Hz
If I am not wrong, 6 months or more ago it was S$3499 :bigeyes: , really tempting :sweat:
DellTM 30" 3007WFP UltraSharpTM Widescreen Flat Panel Monitor
2560x1600 at 60 Hz
If I am not wrong, 6 months or more ago it was S$3499 :bigeyes: , really tempting :sweat:
actually i would be a little careful when buying monitors that are larger than 24", you need a special graphics card to support them, as what i saw on a website selling the monitor
"Note:The Dell 3007WFP requires a DVI-D dual link graphics card that supports WQXGA (2560x1600) res."
I don't think it's really an ideal screen for doing DI work (I suppose you will use it for that). It's specs are similar to the 2005 (24" lcd) series which have been replaced by the better 2007. Read about some brightness uniformity issues. Seems like Dell didn't update to a newer model for 30" yet. Price is really attractive though. Do take note that you will need dual graphics card to drive this 30" monster, so if you only got 1, have to factor in the cost of getting another same graphics card.