CNET editors' review
-
CNET editors' rating:
stars
Excellent
Detailed editors' rating
- Reviewed on: 10/03/2002
Out of the box
To ease its already simple setup process, the EN-7500 ships with an 8-page, printed quick-start guide and a comprehensive, illustrated 28-page PDF electronic manual (on the driver CD). This detailed documentation will come in handy for computer-centric buyers who aren't familiar with some of the monitor's television features, including closed captioning and the V-Chip (for channel blocking). The box also includes a VGA video cable, a power adapter and cord, and a remote control. To attach the display to a video source, you'll need a cable with a composite video plug (an RCA-phono plug), S-Video attachment (an S-Video plug), or a standard cable-TV or antenna connector (a 75-ohm video plug). These cables often come with your VCR or with a cable TV hookup, but if you don't have one, you can find them at most electronics stores.
In appearance, this LCD diverges a bit from its peers. Although most current LCDs come with narrow bezels, the EN-7500's bezel is fairly wide, especially compared to other 17-inch monitors. The EN-7500 needs this larger frame, however, to accommodate its side-mounted speakers. Even though they're relatively small, the built-in speakers have a clear and full-bodied sound--a real plus if you plan to use the unit as a standalone television.
Two for one
Why would you want to use your monitor as a TV? Apart from saving space, this setup lets you switch easily between working at your computer and watching TV. You can even view both your show and your PC applications at the same time by sending your television channel to a small, inner window on the screen. The EN-7500's TV features, integrated into the monitor's easy-to-navigate onscreen menu system, include eight control buttons that line the bottom front of the cabinet: PiP, source, menu, exit, channel up, channel down, volume up, and volume down. You can also access all menu functions with the included remote control.
We're rather taken with this monitor's PiP option. It allows you to, say, browse a candidate's Web site while watching the election returns on CNN. Plus, you can position the inner window anywhere on the screen, and by using the remote control, you can switch between your PC and television by pressing a single button.
Unfortunately, the EN-7500's PiP limitations mean that you can't alter the size of the inner window (it's about 1/16 the size of the full screen). Also, the main window must display the signal from your PC, and the inner window must pull its signal from your cable-TV hookup or television antenna. No flexibility here.
The competition
When judged strictly as a computer monitor, the Envision EN-7500 holds its own against the similarly priced ViewSonic VE700 and even the more expensive Samsung SyncMaster 171P and NEC MultiSync LCD1880SX displays. In fact, the EN-7500's fast 20ms pixel-response rate beats the VE700's 35ms, the MultiSync LCD1880SX's 33ms, and the SyncMaster 171P's 25ms pixel-response rates hands down. (The faster your pixel-response rate, the less blurring you'll experience during fast-moving video or animation.)
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