Buffalo pops out 22-inch WUXGA LCD monitor
Nothing much to phone home over here, just a run-of-the-mill 22-incher with a mighty respectable WUXGA (1,920 x 1,200) resolution. The Buffalo FTD-HD2232HSR/BK also boasts a 1,000:1 contrast ratio, 300cd/m2 brightness, HDCP-compatible DVI port, 170-degree viewing angles and an "ECO" mode that'll save energy... somehow. Word on the street has it landing here shortly for around €280 ($390).
[Via CrunchGear]
[Via CrunchGear]



















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Alitos @ Sep 10th 2008 6:19PM
1st jackass :D
mattzane11 @ Sep 10th 2008 6:18PM
FIRST to say FIRST AND TO BE LOW RANKED! :-P
Rubicon @ Sep 10th 2008 6:21PM
i say, the new low ranked system aint too bad, tho engadget should bring back lowest ranked, and like 90% translucency for that ranking
anyways back on topic, whats the big deal bout this screen?
Ghen @ Sep 11th 2008 5:10AM
Yeah, I was a big fan of lowest ranked. If they're afraid of hurting feelings then the spammers already win.
Nomi @ Sep 10th 2008 6:23PM
oh cool...they are finally shading the comments as per its rank.
Nomi @ Sep 10th 2008 6:24PM
can we lowest rank a comment and highest rank another so we can see the difference in contrast?
Jeremy K. @ Sep 10th 2008 6:52PM
It's actually blinding. I would be nice keep regular comments normal, high ranked comments darker and low ranked comments really light, rather than normal light, low really light, and high normal.
Nihility @ Sep 10th 2008 7:02PM
Ugh it's unreadable, some of us are using TN panels you know...
ethana2 @ Sep 10th 2008 7:26PM
I'm glad to see that they can make things unreadable with comment shading but-- we'll let me test this..
ethana2 @ Sep 10th 2008 7:27PM
Yeah, no post edits.
Dude, if a comment is neutral, maybe people still want to be able to read it.
Nomi @ Sep 10th 2008 8:41PM
well the good thing is you can skip over to the useful comments easily....i guess they can tune the neutral ones to be a bit darker.
Matthew C @ Sep 10th 2008 9:41PM
I say: highest, highly, and neutral fully black
light on low, and lowest are gone
corystal @ Sep 10th 2008 11:13PM
ya... enough low ranks should make them disappear BUT they should all go 100% on roll over since often the idiocy is quite amusing :)
my $.02
Knives_Out @ Sep 10th 2008 11:25PM
neutral should be darker. this is annoying.
only penalize the "low ranked"
allislost @ Sep 11th 2008 3:48AM
Corystal's idea is good. Hide low ranks and add a "show comment" link instead.
allislost @ Sep 11th 2008 3:48AM
Corystal's idea is good. Hide low ranks and add a "show comment" link instead.
allislost @ Sep 11th 2008 3:50AM
... fuck...
Plothole @ Sep 11th 2008 5:26AM
The difference between neutral and high rank seems rather subtle. At least in Firefox.
Hellaphunt @ Sep 10th 2008 6:25PM
Why does it look like IBM designed it? It looks so 90's.
Information Central @ Sep 10th 2008 8:22PM
90's? What is the 90, and which of its possessions are you referring to?
Hellaphunt @ Sep 11th 2008 12:23PM
I will not humor you.
quiksilv3r @ Sep 10th 2008 6:26PM
a 22" with WUXGA resolution!?!?! i just creamed my pants
Andrew @ Sep 10th 2008 6:26PM
It looks rather ugly and cheap. I'd say even my work-provided Acer 1716 looks a bit better (and that one is the cheapest LCD money can buy). It doesn't look like it has any kind of ergonomic adjustments either. And at 170 viewing angle, it is quite possibly a TN, too. At that price, it's a fail unless you MUST get a 22" because of some space limitation. In which case it's better to go with Lenovo's 22" full HD since that one has a good panel, at least.
Wwhat @ Sep 10th 2008 6:27PM
Way too small for the resolution, too low a contrast, bezel is ok.
johnnyletter75 @ Sep 10th 2008 6:46PM
Well, then my 17" WUXGA laptop would really hurt your eyes. They finally offer WUXGA on 15" Dell Studio laptops, so I'm going with that next time for the larger size. This monitor blows IMO (ugly), but I'm surprised that more manufacturers don't offer WUXGA below 24". Dell's middle-of-the-road 24-incher (S2409W) is $50 cheaper than this, and I think they still offer an E model that's even cheaper.
PROTIP: Dell's Outlet has the 27" UltraSharp monitors for $750 - the biggest WUXGA screen I know of...
Kamokazi @ Sep 10th 2008 7:03PM
Not at all. I think 1680x1050 is a little big for 22" monitors. And many 15.4" laptops can be found with 1680x1050, some even with 1920x1200. Pixel density is good for you.
Wwhat @ Sep 10th 2008 8:41PM
Notebooks are limited in options and are viewed real close, a monitor is more distant and I'm simply right. deal with it best you can, vote me down for instance if that does it for you :)
Wwhat @ Sep 10th 2008 9:04PM
Just teasing, you can vote me down for any reason you see fit
Matthew C @ Sep 10th 2008 9:49PM
Yeah - i do everything on my 15.4 inch 1900 by 1200
its the only way stuff actually looks life like
yay for 147 ppi
Wwhat @ Sep 11th 2008 5:48AM
Funny how my voted down comment about too low contrast is now super-low contrast, thanks to the new comment(-annoy) system.
Jeremy K. @ Sep 10th 2008 6:36PM
It's pretty pricey for what it is... although it'll probably be around $280 since gadgets rarely are the same price in the US as it is in Europe.
Nate P @ Sep 10th 2008 6:45PM
The Lenovo L220x was announced almost exactly a year ago with virtually the same specs, including the 90's look--not that I care about that. If there were two choices that had the same specs, I'd get the old looking one, assuming the ONLY difference was aesthetics.
I want them to spend their R&D money on giving it better functionality vs. a pretty stand. Lenovo will continue to receive my recommendation (not that it's worth anything) as long as their products continue to improve and have the look that says 'we aren't screwing around with superficial crap like making it pretty'. Sorry, pet peeve.
Does anyone know if the buffalo here uses the same panel as the L220x?
Randy @ Sep 10th 2008 6:44PM
For a second there, I read the headline as "Buffalo Poops out.."
I'm sorry. I'll shut up now...
ethana2 @ Sep 10th 2008 7:29PM
I read your comment because I could.
...I do think they could have titled the article better...
How about: engadget poops out new comment system 'feature'
Christopher @ Sep 10th 2008 6:44PM
Oh god, why are you complaining about the size?
It's impossible to get something with the pixel density of a 17" WUXGA laptop screen in a desktop (sidenote: LCD manufacturers - I'll buy four. Make them already.)
This is better than 24" at 19x12, but not quite there yet.
caleb @ Sep 10th 2008 8:37PM
Eversince i had a 15.4" laptop with 1920X1200 I've been on the lookout for monitors that would push these higher pixel densities. I hope more manufactures follow this line.
Matthew C @ Sep 10th 2008 9:51PM
i know what you mean - give me wqxga in a 26 inch
thatrotierkid @ Sep 10th 2008 9:57PM
wow his comment is opaque... new comment system feature?
does this mean they fixed the glitches too?!
thatrotierkid @ Sep 10th 2008 9:57PM
wow his comment is opaque... new comment system feature?
does this mean they fixed the glitches too?!
Wolfticket @ Sep 10th 2008 10:28PM
"does this mean they fixed the glitches too?!"
"does this mean they fixed the glitches too?!"
:-)
Gokie @ Sep 10th 2008 11:59PM
I'm glad that more companies are making sub-24" WUXGA screens. At this point a 24" is still better simply due to how many models are available, but if someone offered a high-end 22" - PVA panel, 2 or more digital inputs (any combination of HDMI and DVI with HDCP), VGA, and Component - I'd definitely look long and hard at it in deciding if a 24" would be worth it.
Michael Wildman @ Sep 11th 2008 12:03AM
Is it just me or is that thing IDENTICAL to the AOC 2216VW.
Im using the AOC right now and it is exactly the same but with a buffalo logo.
Oh and on further inspection, mine is 1680x1050 not 1920x1200
but the case looks the same...
apeguero @ Sep 11th 2008 12:27AM
This is cool. So, are 24" displays going the 2560x1600 next? Or the 27" displays even? That would be really nice. The big resolution without taking up that much desk real estate. The WXGA on this 22" display is good.
Evan @ Sep 11th 2008 7:54AM
Once again, Engadget blindly copy-pastes a press release. Is it TN or PVA? What's the color gamut?
And so what if it's 1920x1200? Resolution isn't everything - colors and black levels are equally, if not more, important! A 720p Pioneer plasma television produces a superior picture than a 1080p Walmart LCD. A 6 megapixel digital SLR captures a superior picture than a 10 megapixel point-and-shoot.
Skyride @ Sep 11th 2008 12:06PM
It is for typical PC users. And most people are too dumb to tell the difference between a walmart 1080p and a pioneer 720p (although I agree).
Ive personally got my eyes set on 2x 24" at christmas. :)
David @ Sep 12th 2008 12:16PM
Any information on the scaler? After owning a 245bw with a horrible scaler , my new interest in newer monitors is to find out exactly what their scaler does ,and how it looks. 1920 x 1200 in 22" should look pretty crisp.
Woody @ Sep 11th 2008 9:05AM
So why the hell is the damn thing so pricey? My cheap HP monitor that came from my Best Buy bundle has all those specs and probably only cost $120. What's up with that? Mine even looks better.
Skyride @ Sep 11th 2008 12:07PM
How is 1920x1200 "run of the mill" for a 22". Its awesome although i'd still rather have a 24".