Source: Tom's Guide US | Keywords: are, you, ready, for, hp | Themes: Business Notebooks
- 1. Who Needs A Mobile Workstation?
- 2. Stable Case And Optional Second Battery
- 3. Clearly Labeled Ports
- 4. Docking Station And Easy Memory Upgrade
- 5. Screen: Good Brightness And Contrast
- 6. Screen: Good Brightness And Contrast, Continued
- 7. Keyboard, Mouse And Speakers
- 8. Wireless Connections
- 9. Hard Disk And Optical Drive
- 10. The NW8240 Compared To Standard Mobile Computers
- 11. Benchmark Tests
- 12. Battery Time: MobileMark 2005
- 13. Battery Time: MobileMark 2005, Continued
- 14. Office Applications: SYSmark 2004 SE
- 15. Office Applications: SYSmark 2004 SE, Continued
- 16. PCMark05
- 17. 3DMark05
- 18. Open GL Workstation Performance
- 19. Viewperf 8.1 (Synthetic), Continued
- 20. 3D Studio Max 7 (Application)
- 21. Conclusions
- 22. More on this topic
6. Screen: Good Brightness And Contrast, Continued
To interpret these diagrams, first note that the intersection points in the grid symbolize the 64 measuring locations; the associated brightness/contrast values represent the measured brightness/contrast values in the respective fields. The values that link the individual grid points and the "level curves" are obtained by linear interpolation of the measured values of two adjacent intersections. The different colors represent screen sections in which the measured values are within the certain value range; the value ranges are specified in the legend. The colors do not represent the real colors displayed by the monitor.
The upper edge of the "carpet" symbolizes the bottom edge of the screen, and the opposite edge corresponds to the top edge of the screen. The two other edges represent the left and right sides of the screen.
The following images present the screen performance data in comparison to various laptops tested by THG.



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