CNET editors' review
- CNET editors' rating: stars Excellent
Detailed editors' rating
- Reviewed on: 10/29/2001
Hip outside; traditional inside
The Compaq S720's sleek, silver-gray and black casing fits right in with office decor of the new millennium. On the inside, however, the monitor employs a traditional, shadow-mask cathode-ray tube (CRT). The monitor lacks some of today's fancier features, such as integrated USB ports; they're not even available as an option. However, the S720 comes with a full assortment of literature, including a quick-setup guide, a booklet of worldwide tech-support numbers, a safety-information guide, a warranty booklet, and a comprehensive user guide on CD-ROM that takes you through unpacking, installing, learning the controls, and troubleshooting any problems with the monitor.
The S720's onscreen-display controls are also traditional--and easy to master. Four buttons grouped on the front of the monitor include one to call up the onscreen menu, right- and left-arrow buttons to scroll through the controls and to adjust levels, and another button to select which control you want to adjust. Pressing the arrow buttons also brings up the Contrast control and lets you toggle between Contrast and Brightness. The monitor includes a nearly full set of calibration tools--everything from horizontal-size and -position to horizontal- and vertical-moiré controls. The S720's onscreen display lacks some of the more advanced controls, such as pincushion balance, individual color control, and convergence, as well as controls that let you move the onscreen menu around and adjust how long it takes for the onscreen display to time out and disappear. While these controls are useful, in all likelihood, most business users won't need these monitor settings.
Acceptable text; great color
Fortunately, Compaq sacrificed little in the way of image quality to keep the S720's price low. The monitor boasts a .24mm dot pitch, small enough to promise crisp-looking images. It also has a maximum resolution of 1,280x1,024, but given its 65Hz refresh rate, it would hurt your eyes to look at it for very long. For CNET Labs' DisplayMate tests, we set the monitor to a resolution of 1,024x768 pixels with a much more comfortable 85Hz refresh rate.
The S720's performance was good overall. When we examined text, we noticed some jagginess and merging of letters at 6.8-point font size, but at 9 points and above, text was perfectly legible and much smoother-looking. The S720 did an excellent job of reproducing colors and grayscale images. We looked at several photographs in Photoshop and found that images were bright and vibrant, colors looked true, and tricky skin tones were handled with aplomb. The baroque and impressionist paintings we examined on the Web retained nearly all of the vibrant color and crisp detail of the original paintings, and the display's focus was good from corner to corner. Because of a few geometry problems, such as a slight tilt that couldn't be corrected, and the aforementioned text problems, the S720 scored about average on our tests compared with other 17-inch monitors. However, the average user will be more than satisfied with the S720's capabilities. Continue reading
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