Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Supermonitor costs U.S. $ 1,000 per inch


Known for producing hardcore monitors for professional applications that demand the highest image definition and color possible - such as departments or medical photographers, for example - the Japanese Eizo presented on Monday DuraVision FDH3601 the legitimate representative of the state of the art of turning digital signals into visible images.


His credentials to enter the Olympus monitors are its 36.4-inch LCD panel with 4k2k and resolution (4096 pixels by 2160 pixels). The device has a response time of 8ms, 1000:1 contrast ratio and two DVI-D, plus two other DisplayPorts integrated.

The conversation gets interesting when Mark says that the display model was developed to provide high durability, designed to work "24 hours a day, 7 days a week, without presenting any kind of failures or distortions of color and images".

Interested parties may now have to motor caminhõezihos their money, the model should hit stores in September for the Japanese tune of 280 million yen, which gives U.S. $ 54,000 without the proper taxes and fees. In dollars, the price is $ 34,000, almost $ 1000 per inch image.