Equipment
- 1. Separating The Wheat From The Chaff
- 2. Brightness And Contrast
- 3. Viewing Angles
- 4. HDTV Formats
- 5. HD-TV: Connectivity
- 6. The Small Form Factor PC: Your LCD TV's Best Friend
- 7. The THG Method
- 8. Video Tests
- 9. Sony KLV-26HG2
- 10. Equipment
- 11. Video Quality
- 12. Sharp Aquos LC26GA3E / LC26GA4E
- 13. Equipment
- 14. Spatial Uniformity
- 15. Sharp Aquos LC26GA3E: A Racehorse Of A TV Set
- 16. Interpolation And PC Mode
- 17. Philips 26PF9946/12
- 18. Equipment
- 19. Spatial Uniformity
- 20. Video Quality
- 21. Samsung LT-P266W
- 22. Samsung LT-P266W: Basic Fidelity
- 23. Such Good Responses
- 24. Interpolation And PC Mode
- 25. Dell W2600: Withhold Your Prejudices
- 26. Dell W2600: Respect For Standards
- 27. Dell W2600: But
- 28. Neovia NEO26DT: Breaking The 1,000 Euro Barrier?
- 29. Design And Finish
- 30. Spatial Uniformity
- 31. Sound Quality
18. Equipment

The monitor has fairly complete connectivity, with 3 Peritel connectors, DVI, S-Video, and of course, cinch connectors for audio and video.
Philips 26PF9946/12: Flashy Colors

Light colors were reproduced well, but dark colors were a disaster. It was possible to attain 6500K, but again, the gamma was not quite up to requirements.
| Black spot | White spot | Contrast |
|---|---|---|
| 1.23 | 437 | 355: 1 |
The panel's brightness was very high - too high, even, for family use, which is what we're interested in. To watch a movie you do have to be a minimum distance from the screen, but that's not enough to justify this kind of brightness. The result is that the black level is too high, at 1.23 nits. A value like that would cause us to automatically reject a computer monitor. In the context of the high brightness, these blacks are more acceptable. But it's still too high a brightness level for our liking.
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