One Month with the Best Monitor in the World: The New Dell 40" 5K120 HDR U4025QW

2024 ж. 26 Ақп.
214 888 Рет қаралды

Dave spends a month with the brand new Dell 5K120 HDR monitor. For my book on life on the Spectrum: amzn.to/49sCbbJ
Follow me on Facebook at fb.com/davepl for daily shenanigans!
The little air-quality clock I show in one scene (several folks have asked!): amzn.to/3Tjgt4q
Dell Ultrasharp 27" - amzn.to/49Hjjp8
Dell Ultrasharp 32" - amzn.to/3uDxjS4
Dell Curved 34" - amzn.to/4bWPt1V
Dell Ultrasharp 38" - amzn.to/49shAo3
Dell Ultrasharp 40" - www.dell.com/en-us/shop/dell-...
0:00: 💻 Review of a high-quality 40-inch curved 5K120 HDR monitor by Dell, emphasizing the speaker's expertise and independence.
3:20: ⚙️ Opportunistic acquisition of a malfunctioning monitor leads to a troubleshooting challenge.
6:00: 💻 High-resolution Dell monitor offers immersive gaming experience but excels in productivity tasks.
9:00: 💻 Versatile monitor with multiple inputs, including USB-C for laptop display and charging, and unique iPad connectivity.
12:17: ⚡️ Impressions of using the Dell 40" 5K monitor for a month, including performance and connectivity features.
15:29: ⚡️ Cutting-edge color accuracy, lightning-fast response time, and innovative Thunderbolt connectivity.
18:30: ⚙️ High-performance monitor with advanced features like variable refresh rate and dynamic refresh rate.

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  • 2:07 "I was part of the NT GUI team that was responsible for adding multiple monitor support" Dude, are there any of the good features in Windows that you're _not_ responsible for?! It seems if you pick any of the things that Windows has nailed from a useability perspective, it's got davepl's name all over it!

    @jhonbus@jhonbus2 ай бұрын
  • the camera cut to the monitor with you still talking was a nice touch

    @supremebeme@supremebeme2 ай бұрын
  • Oh and Dave, nice video editing and attention to detail - I appreciate paying attention to giving enough time for viewers to actually be able to read the hard coded text without having to rewind and pause the video, yet not having it on screen for too long where it becomes annoying. Keep up the good work.

    @SNAFU56@SNAFU562 ай бұрын
    • that blend from the video recorded off of the monitor to the source video was just perfect :P

      @Maverrick2140@Maverrick21402 ай бұрын
    • And having that all be true while watching at 2x is perfection

      @dearmash@dearmash2 ай бұрын
  • Love the history and review of this, I equally am super excited about this release! I also just bought and read your book and it was profoundly helpful in understanding certain parts of myself, for which I thank you greatly. ♥

    @cybermuse6917@cybermuse69172 ай бұрын
  • The NECs were sweet. I remember as a teen saving up from my summer jobs to buy a P750 and it trounced everything my friends had. NEC customer service was awesome as well. One time I had a later model exchanged for bad geometry even the service menu couldn't fix and they literally sent a courier (from Germany to The Netherlands, mind you) to pick it up and deliver a new one the next day, no questions asked. Their digital CRT projectors were superb as well, I continued using my XG-110LC well into the 2000s. Being loyal to the brand I also tried their first LCD monitors but they were pretty bland and I sadly moved on.

    @jeroenvermiljoen@jeroenvermiljoen2 ай бұрын
    • I still have a NEC 20" WGX2 lying around in my basement, which was a pretty good 16:10 IPS lcd monitor. But it was hard to get at the time (in the Netherlands) and relatively expensive.

      @wreagfe@wreagfe2 ай бұрын
    • Nec Monitors were quite good as long as they did not break down. Their printers were terrible and their support was lies and non existent. I managed a large IBM PC reseller service section in Sydney Australia in the mid to late 1980s and some NEC products were part of the sales offering. We had broken NEC equipment on every self in the building, all under warranty waiting parts. Nearly all printers and nearly all with the same fault. Broken paper feed knobs. Could we get spares. No. They were always "on the way" and "being produced now" as NEC Japan had not made any as spare parts. We stopped selling them. Nec was supposedly a very profitable going ahead company, yes, because it had no post sale support and warranty costs. But NEC disappeared from the market sometime after. This was not limited to NEC several Japanese companies had no post sales support. Unlike the US and European manufactures who had recommended lists of spares that should be carried depending on sales volumes and market penetration.

      @jimspc07@jimspc072 ай бұрын
    • The monitor that I really wanted back in early 1994 was the Sony 17" trinitron. Unfortunately my parents were with me at the store. Dad freaked out that I was going to spend $1,200 (or so) on a new 17" monitor. I ended up leaving the Fry's with a NEC 4FGe 15" monitor. It was adequate. But certainly not worth saving that $500 delta. The 4FGE claimed to be 15", but it was really more like 13.7" as I recall.

      @CarlenHoppe@CarlenHoppe2 ай бұрын
    • I had a NEC 3D early on and then got a deal on a new NEC 6FG. That was a 150lb monitor.

      @Taras-Nabad@Taras-Nabad13 күн бұрын
  • Welcome to the club :) I have U4021QW for about a year now and LOVE it. Best investment and no back problems from twisting my body for looking on multiple monitors.

    @psytcp@psytcp2 ай бұрын
  • I ordered mine 1 week ago. I'm glade to here from you, that I seem to picked the right monitor. Thanks for making such videos.

    @fraenkli@fraenkli2 ай бұрын
  • I too have a Dell 38" with a Macbook and love it, excellent review this will be my next screen, thanks Dave.

    @Ltech-ludditetechnologies@Ltech-ludditetechnologies2 ай бұрын
  • OMG Dave you just made me flashback to the 90s...I had the same NEC Multisync display. I even got to take it home, to power my home PC. As to two of those monitors I know that trading floors will use them, but not side by side. They will be stacked on top of the other. Love all your gear in the background. You are making me want to pull out my original Apple I that is signed by Jobs and Woz!

    @stevefxp@stevefxp2 ай бұрын
  • I had a couple of those NEC CRT's back when I worked for the oil company. They lent me one for home that they never asked for back and I used for a while after they were merged I was surplused. I am still using my Dell Ultrasharp from 2008 though not as my primary monitor it has been an incredible work horse and well worth what was a premium at the time but it wasn't curved and now I don't think I could go back to a flat monitor for my primary

    @GregLanz@GregLanz2 ай бұрын
  • I love your channel, feels like watching my ideal future self talk about tech. Thanks Dave!

    @MarioHachemer@MarioHachemerАй бұрын
  • Thank you Dave for making these videos. You have setups I aspire to which somehow still seem obtainable.

    @NickSealPueo@NickSealPueo2 ай бұрын
  • "The holy grail" ? I remember when the "pizza box" Sun workstations came with 20" black and white CRTs. That was the holy grail back then. 1 MB of RAM and a 100 MB SCSI hard drive ! That was heaven. Everything has been gravy since then.

    @SomeTechGuy666@SomeTechGuy6662 ай бұрын
    • Dam, I can remember humping one of those around to give demonstrations to customers. We had padded bags for all the individual components, but the monitor was a two-man lift.

      @davidclift5989@davidclift59892 ай бұрын
    • @@davidclift5989 Yeah Sun was all proud of how small their computer was and then there was the huge monitor that went with it. It was very good for its time though. It gave the user enough screen real estate to view the analog clock beside a code window. LOL. Way nicer than a 13 or 15" CRT.

      @SomeTechGuy666@SomeTechGuy6662 ай бұрын
    • The "gravy" 👍seems to improve with every dip into the pot.

      @ericsbuell@ericsbuell2 ай бұрын
  • broken kit was a valuable commodity in the 90’s for me because we had a way of getting it swapped for brand new kit - the same piece of broken kit may go through the system more than once each time providing a new bit of kit

    @eliotmansfield@eliotmansfield2 ай бұрын
  • So awesome man! Great show! Thank you!

    @radnaut@radnaut2 ай бұрын
  • Thanks Dave, you manage to make almost any content really interesting!

    @neeosstuff7540@neeosstuff75408 күн бұрын
  • People who obsess over monitor brightness are just nit picking.

    @s.patrickmarino7289@s.patrickmarino72892 ай бұрын
    • 😆

      @StefaanContreras@StefaanContreras2 ай бұрын
    • 😂 nice

      @JamesOKeefe-US@JamesOKeefe-US2 ай бұрын
    • Aayyy! We're nitpicky but rightfully so! 😂 A lot of ultrawides lack adequate brightness so if you work next to a bright window, the screen can look dim. As an interface designer, accurate color and brightness is crucial because my whites look more like light gray... And think about how much whites and grays are our any app or website. It's a big issue if I can't tell them apart. 💀 Plus, I'm paying for these big windows for a reason. If I have to close my blinds and work in a dark room just to work effectively, it defeats the purpose. I might as well just live in a cave lol

      @katwdesigns@katwdesignsАй бұрын
    • ​@@katwdesigns your problem!

      @picadediamante8492@picadediamante849228 күн бұрын
    • @@katwdesigns I always look dim. I blame my multiple LG monitors.

      @stuartedge5906@stuartedge590621 күн бұрын
  • Gosh - just seen your Apple 2 in the background. I worked for a firm where we converted them to run CP/M using a Z80 card. We developed on DG Minis a large 4GL for supermarket use ... and then ported the package to the Apple 2. We then shipped the Apple 2s to clients. Now the shocker .. we coded everything in Forth .. an amazing language.

    @coldlyanalytical1351@coldlyanalytical13512 ай бұрын
    • That's super cool, thanks for sharing that

      @christosbinos8467@christosbinos84672 ай бұрын
    • I had a Franklin Ace 1000 which was a clone of the Apple 2. They were sued by Apple and had to shutdown.

      @polygon2744@polygon27442 ай бұрын
    • @@polygon2744 If you still have it you could be rich!

      @coldlyanalytical1351@coldlyanalytical13512 ай бұрын
    • If I had had an extra $200 at the time I, too, would have been an Apple person...

      @nufosmatic@nufosmatic2 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for this video, Dave! I too am a multi monitor lover. I started with a Hercules card and a VGA card to get two monitors and then coding in MS QuicBasic and Assembly to write on each of them for a home made alarm using the parallel ports as inputs for sensors. Keep up the great work! Thank you so much!

    @IntiniOfficial@IntiniOfficial2 ай бұрын
  • New to the channel. Impressed to the brim with the quality of information and clarity of delivery. Also come from Amiga background and got very nostalgic seeing the old computers in the background. Obviously subscribed and left a like! looking through your archive now and exited about the future videos. Thank you!

    @jaytynenski3972@jaytynenski39722 күн бұрын
  • My favorite ever monitor was the Sun branded 17" Sony Trinitron. I hung on to that for many years!

    @kentclarstroem@kentclarstroem2 ай бұрын
    • I had 2 Sony Trinitron's that I also held onto for a long time, loved those things and the only reason I don't still have them is they were too big/heavy for me to bring when I moved states

      @nadtz@nadtz2 ай бұрын
    • When did you finally part ways with and why?

      @SpectatingApexPubs@SpectatingApexPubs2 ай бұрын
    • Part of me still misses CRTs.

      @jovetj@jovetj2 ай бұрын
    • The Trinitrons were great, but once I noticed the two horizontal lines (from the damper wires), I could never "not see them", and it drove me crazy. I had to replace them.

      @TonyPombo@TonyPombo2 ай бұрын
    • I’ve still got my Sun Trinitron. The 1152 x 900 resolution was a bit odd, but it was a fabulous picture for its day. Also that funky D shell size B connector with the coaxial ports and 13 pins or whatever it was had to be the strangest video interface cable o the planet. It was kind of cool that Sun used Apple ADB for the mouse and keyboard cables.

      @wtmayhew@wtmayhew2 ай бұрын
  • I swear he said 'parsec'. I started chuckling and was totally entertained. Well done Dave!

    @dougstarwalt8984@dougstarwalt89842 ай бұрын
    • Got to keep the display chromulent. Niche monitor geek jokes.

      @tchmilfan@tchmilfan2 ай бұрын
    • He had Trekkie shock from the massive pixel count.

      @Dirtyharry70585@Dirtyharry7058519 күн бұрын
    • He DID say it! I thought so, too, but now I'm sure!!

      @hotflashfoto@hotflashfoto19 күн бұрын
  • Nostalgia! My Commodore Plus4 still works. I loved that computer. The cartridges, the cassette drive, the built-in spreadsheet and word processor, two games on cassette. So fun.

    @zynan@zynanАй бұрын
  • I have been running a U3419W for about two years now. It's hard to go back to dual 27" monitors at the office. Though I do have a 27" in portrait at home now I use mainly when working at the house. Thanks for the great content, Dave!

    @justinspoerle1739@justinspoerle17392 ай бұрын
  • Back in the days as a Tech support I used to come across employees using their tube monitor which was capable of around 75 hz. Problem was it was set to 30ish hz... They didn't notice the flickering. I was wondering how many headaches they had each days. So I quickly fixed that display setting. They never complained about the horrible flickering.. Just amazed me as I could spot wrong display settings from a mile away. This new monitor your are test driving is just incredibly awesome.. I would love to get my hands on it.. But for you to take advantage of it I guess I would also need to get an RTX 4090.. that is looking at a total of € 4500,= at local prices here (NL)..... Guess I'll have to wait and keep using my Dell curved S3220DGF which is pretty good..

    @JPEaglesandKatz@JPEaglesandKatz2 ай бұрын
  • I was running dual monitors in a DOS environment for debugging with Borland C++ and also with Clipper 5.x in the early 1990's. It was possible to have a VGA monochrome card and an ATI VGA Wonder in the same machine as they used separate memory addresses. If "memory" serves me you could run the monochrome VGA card at either B000 or B800. This configuration allowed you to have the app you were debugging on the color screen and the debugger running on the monochrome. Or you could do it the other way around and have the debugger on the color monitor and the application running on the monochrome. It was a much better environment for debugging a Small Grroup Insurance Proposal System with many complexities of different rules by state which drove product availability and rating. There was a presentation layer, a product availability module, and a rating engine that was used both for quoting new business and also used renewal rate calculations.

    @PeterSarazin@PeterSarazin2 ай бұрын
    • Yes, you remember correctly! I was running both a monochrome and color display, both in graphics mode, so I could more quickly make sure my (custom!) graphics code worked on both. It was painful to give up the monochrome display, but I eventually did to support 800x600 VGA, which required the full 64k address space (both 0xB0000 and 0xB8000). Well, actually, I temporarily gave it up so I could double-buffer my graphics… For me, the most impressive thing about W95 was its ability to _virtualize_ my double-buffered VGA code in a 640x350 window on a 1024x768 desktop, with the CPU utilization at less than 30% on a 33 MHz 486. (!!!) Of course, it sucked so much in so many other ways, I’ve been a Linux user since ‘96, but hey, I give credit where it’s due.

      @altosack@altosack2 ай бұрын
    • @@altosack what distro do you prefer for your desktop PC?

      @nicholash8021@nicholash80212 ай бұрын
    • Full stack DOS application sounds like a tech stack 1 level deep :-D

      @andynn6691@andynn66912 ай бұрын
    • @@andynn6691 It was a Insurance quoting system written in Clipper 5.x ( a compiled version of dBase) There were modules for product availability and a rating engine. The front end was Clipper 5.x with console/io functions that we wrote in C. We also used a CAS 2.0 fax library so that our agents could fax quotes directly to clients. We were using Blinker for compiling and linking. The data was stored in dBase .dbf files using the foxpro .cdx indexes as they performed better. The software was distributed to insurance agents around the country on 3½ and 5¼ disks that we created on our own disk duplication machines and mailed out. Not bad for the early 1990's 🙂

      @PeterSarazin@PeterSarazin2 ай бұрын
    • Same here on and 286 with a VGA card and old monochrome card, does anyone remember control keys to switch back and forth between monitors, it’s not important but it just bothers me I can’t remember it.

      @YellowRambler@YellowRamblerАй бұрын
  • Thank's Dave. Entertaining as always. I am actually excited for this monitor, since having another 5K display for my Mac would be nice.

    @thetechpastor@thetechpastor2 ай бұрын
  • I had an ingenious Frankenbuild in 1987: A MacPlus, modded with an SE motherboard, an internal SCSI harddisk and a PC PSU and a fan, partly hiding behind an E-Machines "The Big Picture", a 1024 x 768 17" display with a slow phosphor, that had an asymmetric back so that the Mac just showed enough so you could access the Floppy drive. Word 4 was king for years on the Mac. An amazing step up from WordPerfect 5.1. Sadly no longer have it :-( Around 2001, I upgraded my Apple 13" Trinitron (gorgeous) to a Sun 17 inch LCD that lasted for many years. That was a rock solid display.

    @LarsBerntropBos@LarsBerntropBos2 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for the tip! I just ordered one based on your review.

    @daryljones285@daryljones2852 ай бұрын
    • Hope you enjoy it!

      @DavesGarage@DavesGarage2 ай бұрын
  • There is a software called Synergy that will let you mouse between 2 computers. Mac and Pc.

    @cbob213@cbob2132 ай бұрын
    • I also work on Linix , but steal your speed a bit

      @JasperWaale@JasperWaale2 ай бұрын
    • Microsoft has Mouse Without borders, works the same, only windows though

      @niek5526@niek55262 ай бұрын
    • that's not the solution to the problem though. the question is to swap the screen input.

      @GottZ@GottZ2 ай бұрын
    • Synergy is for continuous experience for two different systems with single mouse/keyboard and clipboard sharing. Bought out by Logitech iirc. People say it works, but haven't tried it. So it may be the one for the OP to try out. There's also lots of various software for one-system multimon setups. Display Fusion, Actual multiple monitors, etc. the latter having lots of options including which window opens where, grid setups, hotkeys, etc. I can imagine two of those dell monsters one-above-the-other :)

      @BoraHorzaGobuchul@BoraHorzaGobuchul2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@GottZuseful if you have one monitor per machine but only want one kbd/mouse.

      @LeifNelandDk@LeifNelandDk2 ай бұрын
  • Oh, I had similar obsession during that era, I managed to scrounge up a Dec 20 inch crt from an engineer that retired since I was the "System Support" crew in our Dec installation. It was on a Dec Mate workstation that had a 286chip on it. The most interesting aspect was setting the monitor to "non-intelace" mode that was great for my eyes. This I did from Houston, London, Wellington and Hong Kong when I was travelling on the job. My technical customers loved me so much that divisions used to fight over my time. And they were a bunch of government scientists!!!. Memories...

    @fteoOpty64@fteoOpty642 ай бұрын
  • Love your channel. We are about the same age and have similar experiences, albeit I was not a Microsoft wiz kid. Watching this made me remember my Sony Trinitron 21 monitor I had that like you was my last CRT monitor. The size was huge but the weight is what killed me. I am a large strong man and hauling that thing around was a huge PIA. I also remember the tow feint lines that all Sony Trinitron CRT's had. I think they were for a filter or something but they were there when the monitor was mostly all white or a very light color. So fun going down memory lane with you.

    @billmannering5381@billmannering53812 ай бұрын
  • I'm running 3x 40" ultrawide LG monitors off a Mac Studio. They are the 40WP95CP-W so only 5K72. Having 10 feet worth of diagonal monitor is something you get to live with easily. I could never go back.

    @evilutionltd@evilutionltd2 ай бұрын
    • I'm a mere mortal with vertically stacked 21:9 3440x1440 monitors, but I agree - ultrawide monitors are my only solution to both gaming & productivity. The only reason I would use a 16:9 monitor these days would be if I were a streamer with a dedicated vertical chat/stream monitor on the side.

      @von...@von...2 ай бұрын
    • 72 hertz !!! just a TV !

      @lucasrem@lucasrem2 ай бұрын
    • My neck would hurt unless that whole 10 feet was probably 10 feet away lol. I use a Samsung 55" QLED for a monitor and that's hard to be closer than 3-4 feet...

      @smiththers2@smiththers22 ай бұрын
    • @@lucasrem It's a Mac, I'm not gaming on it.

      @evilutionltd@evilutionltd2 ай бұрын
    • @@smiththers2 if your neck hurts if you regularly use it, that's a health issue. My eyes are 35 inches from the centre of all 3 screens. I use the very outside edges of the outside monitors for things I don't use regularly like CCTV monitors and stock readouts. Whatever I'm doing like editing photos or video will be in the centre monitor. The inside edge of the outside monitors will be open folders of things I need and whatever I have playing on KZhead.

      @evilutionltd@evilutionltd2 ай бұрын
  • It should have had 1600 height, this is basically a downgrade to the 38" ultradwides from a few years ago for anyone who cares about screen estate.

    @Aggnog@Aggnog2 ай бұрын
  • been waiting for a monitor like this for so long. Very excited to see they are finally coming to market. Will wait a bit for them to become more reasonable, but its finally here!

    @jcdentonunatco@jcdentonunatco2 ай бұрын
  • From one Amiga lover to another, thank you for the recommendation. I bought this monitor because of this video, and I absolutely love it!

    @piyushkhengar@piyushkhengarАй бұрын
  • Seems we've had very much the same journey on displays! I started my snobbery with the Wyse VT-420 displays connected to VAX-VMS that provided 48 lines of text rather than the pedestrian 24 lines. I had the same series of NECs, Trinitrons, and Viewsonics (multiple sizes) before going LCD. Dell UltraSharp has always been my go-to as their professional screens, particularly the factory color calibrated ones were workhorses! I also went to the 34-inch Dell curved. Recently, I've switched to the Samsung NEO G9 49" for my personal workstation, relegating the Dell 34" to my WFH desk, but this new Dell looks amazing! Thanks for your video and consistently engaging content! For those of use who've been around since Windows and before, I can relate to so many of your topics. Also, was thrilled to see you were a Corvette guy as well!

    @darindelegal1102@darindelegal1102Ай бұрын
  • My original background was in design (now in IT), and I am extremely sensitive and picky with monitors. I really appreciate all the beautifully saturated colors using this video, as it looked great on my 32 inch 4K LG.

    @rickkarrer8370@rickkarrer83702 ай бұрын
  • First time viewer to the channel really enjoy this format of product review with a bit of story telling here and there

    @Indra_Ninja@Indra_Ninja2 ай бұрын
  • I have the U3818DW since 2017 and love the KVM. I added an usb hub to the back and hooked up my DAC/Headphone Amp, Mouse, Keyboard, Microphone and Webcam to it. The usb-c connection connects it to my work laptop and DP to my private PC

    @alexanderdorner7604@alexanderdorner76042 ай бұрын
  • Great review Dave!

    @AndreZA979@AndreZA9792 ай бұрын
  • Back when the DRMO auctions were a thing, one of the lots I won had two minty 21” NEC Diamond Pro monitors on the pallet. Both me and the wifey ran those beautiful displays for ages. Threw my back out one time moving one of those beasts solo. So worth it at the time.

    @Brian-L@Brian-L2 ай бұрын
  • I like that Micron PC in your photo @4:47. That photo makes me feel super nostalgic with the beige CRTs.

    @RandomTechWZ@RandomTechWZ2 ай бұрын
  • I'm only a couple months away from paying off my M2 Ultra and was prepared to buy a second Studio Display. But now you've got me rethinking this.

    @jeffself7981@jeffself79812 ай бұрын
  • Great video Dave! What a impressive monitor. That KVM is a huge selling feature for me. Being able to work off my desktop during my day job and then switch to my Macbook for personal use in the evening is a huge selling feature

    @FewcanJAM@FewcanJAM2 ай бұрын
  • Oh man, this brings back memories. My first color monitor was some no-name 15" CRT. Sometime around Win98 SE I managed to finesse a pair of 19" Sun workstation CRTs with 13W3 input. It was fun finding an adapter for those in the pre-Amazon days. As I recall I had to open them up and solder a sync wire jumper. They supported some obscene refresh rate, and at one point i had an Asus video card with wired LCD shutter glasses for some decent 3D. My first LCD would have been a 15" Viewsonic around 2004. I'm the only person in our office with Dell monitors, been running triple 27"s for about 4 years now.

    @rampagerick@rampagerick2 ай бұрын
  • Dell has been making great monitors for years. I've always loved thier ultrasharp line.

    @phobos258@phobos2582 ай бұрын
  • I loved the reference to warm tube amps!!

    @tonykirby4245@tonykirby42452 ай бұрын
  • Great video! I'm with you, since I have experienced a Dell ultra sharp display, I haven't gone back.

    @ColemanRasof@ColemanRasof2 ай бұрын
  • I have the older brother of this monitor (the non-120 Hz 40 inch 5k one). It's pretty nice as well. It's absolutely enormous.

    @johndonker319@johndonker3192 ай бұрын
    • I keep waiting too, or this DELL, Samsung Qled gen 2 Odyssey ?

      @lucasrem@lucasrem2 ай бұрын
    • love everything about it. The 50/50 split, the docking station, the sharpness and colours. what's not to love?;)

      @psytcp@psytcp2 ай бұрын
    • I got a gen 2 odyssey ark in early december and can say its a pretty serious screen, i dont edit videos so cant comment on color accuracy but it is massive and really immersive, tons of features i wont utilize but the multi screen is sweet​@@lucasrem

      @michaelshafer2996@michaelshafer29962 ай бұрын
  • As always, Dave, you provide a very informative and comprehensive review of hardware that you like! I have the older Dell U4021QW monitor, and I absolutely love it. I've never really wanted another monitor until I saw this video, as the 3-year-old version is still great. The resolution and overall dimensions are the same, but this one ups the refresh rate from 60 to 120 Hz, adds dedicated KVM functionality (I can accomplish pretty much the same thing with the funky Dell Display Manager software) as well as those nice pop-down ports. I may just have to consider upgrading to this newer version, it looks pretty awesome!

    @homeslice1958@homeslice195821 күн бұрын
  • The IBM 3290 Displays were pretty nice for their day. Worked on those while working in a NOC and having side by side sessions or quad sessions was ahead of its time

    @TheOcnetgeek@TheOcnetgeek2 ай бұрын
  • Nice one. Like the monitor history part the most. I remember my first NEC

    @DaveMorris128@DaveMorris1282 ай бұрын
  • Loved this video. I feel the same way about my 32" curved QWHD monitor. Perfect for writing software :)

    @orestes_io@orestes_io2 ай бұрын
  • love the review... nicely done!

    @imramugh@imramugh2 ай бұрын
  • One very lucky day in 2009? my local Arts College had a clear out of their hardware and I obtained an NEC Multisync Monitor along with an Epson A3 Printer, that VDU was superb but huge and heavy. Now using an AOC Agon 34 inch ultrawide curved monitor which is a joy.

    @pdunderhill@pdunderhill2 ай бұрын
  • This is what I'm getting - HP E45c G5 44.5-inch super ultrawide. I'll also add a couple of smaller screens at the sides, but haven't decided what models they'll be. Upgrading from a 49" 4K TV that I've been using for almost 5 years. I do not play games on any of my computers, just work stuff.

    @SeanClarke@SeanClarke2 ай бұрын
  • Oh Dave, you just took me back through 30 years of my computing career . The NEC Multisync, the Trinitron, the huge amount of space they took up in the corner of my desk

    @bbocjcp@bbocjcp19 күн бұрын
  • I was an early multiple monitor adopter as well. I used two networked Win2k PCs (each with its own monitor) along with a KVM switch (minus the V). Now-a-days, my main Linux box has two big monitors and between VNC and Virtual computers, I can control any computer in the house.

    @jamesgazin9447@jamesgazin944715 күн бұрын
  • I love the walk down memory lane. In college I ultra-splurged on a Mac II with the Apple Color Monitor (Trinitron) that was my go-to screen for many years. But it's rival was the NEC Multiscan which was also one of the best out there. As for curved screens, I daily drive two Samsung C34H89x, one for each Mac. They aren't anywhere in the class of the Dell you have but they work and my company paid for them for remote work (the offices have them too).

    @Sevenfeet0@Sevenfeet02 ай бұрын
  • Great nuanced analysis! #🙌 This reminds me of the Commodore 1702 and how I like this end of the timeline, currently.

    @PIXELFLIP@PIXELFLIP2 ай бұрын
  • always well put together... way out of my price range but like you I have been a dual monitor guy for some time now.... I have One 4k monitor and my biggest issue is that many of my applications have not been coded for such high resolutions. Yes some of my best applications are those I used on windows 95 and still use to this day.

    @TheCynysterMind@TheCynysterMind2 ай бұрын
  • Jeez that's amazing. Pricey, but it shows what's next. Super impressive.

    @jimrhea5484@jimrhea54842 ай бұрын
  • I have had three Dell UltraSharp 4K 27" monitors for several years and really like them. Some day I plan to set up a second PC station and that curved baby looks like an ideal candidate. Thanks for the info!

    @hotflashfoto@hotflashfoto19 күн бұрын
  • I started with dual monitors on Windows 98. It was nightmare with poor support and drivers. I clearly remember getting it to work once with my initial setup (one supported Matrox card and one not quite supported card driving a LCD-screen). Worked OK though as soon as I got two supported cards. Since then I've always had multi monitors getting bigger and better over time. My preference is not a curved screen, but one main screen in the middle and smaller screens on the sides. Suits my needs better than one huge screen. I find it very convenient to place utilities windows on one (or two) of the smaller screens while the main screen is used for whatever I'm working on. Just replaced my last really old 24" Dell and currently I've a four screens setup with a 30" as the main display, two cheap Lenovo 2560x1440 screens on one side and a LG Dual Up (2560x2880) on the other. My next upgrade will most likely be the 30" main screen which is getting old and could benefit from a resolution upgrade.

    @frstesiste7670@frstesiste76702 ай бұрын
  • You just made me feel old..still have the VIC20, C64, and C128 with tape and 1541 sitting next to me. The 386 with a math coprocessor was a big thing. Great video as always, people don't remember that the serial port to connect that printer of yours weighed more than a brick

    @paulsolovyovsky1702@paulsolovyovsky17022 ай бұрын
  • I went to a curved, 34" samsung ultrawide a few years ago and i absolutely love it.

    @randy206@randy2062 ай бұрын
  • I heard the part where you are talking about pricing for the other monitors. But missed the price on the dell. I went to their website and was pleasantly surprised with a (barely) sub 2k price point…. Not bad at all. Thank you for the info and nice to know about the keyboard mapping.

    @jasonjtg21@jasonjtg2125 күн бұрын
  • I remember going down to the local computer store (remember those) and plunking down $1050 for a NEC Multisync 17". This was back in the day when a dollar was still worth 50 cents. I never regretted the purchase, and there was no complaint from my wife once she saw the screen. The monitor you're reviewing is likely cheaper than the NEC after accounting for inflation. I wish I needed it.

    @lennywintfeld924@lennywintfeld9242 ай бұрын
  • I've seen that IBM 40in orange plasma display you mentioned, and it was awe inspiring. It was in a Houston IBM office my friend's father worked at, right next to a huge 10 MB hard drive with 12in platters and it felt out of time. Never saw another one again.

    @winklethrall2636@winklethrall26362 ай бұрын
  • Excellent presentation. Thank you. I am currently using two 4k 28" Acers but this might be a nice replacement. I see they also have a 43 and a 49 inch version but they appear to be different monitors with different specs.

    @markmonroe7330@markmonroe73302 ай бұрын
  • That's an insane amount of bandwidth for a single port. Definitely a dream monitor

    @SimonVideo@SimonVideo2 ай бұрын
  • I get and like your TV and movie references. Good work. Oh, and your content is excellent too. ;)

    @JM-xu3cr@JM-xu3cr2 ай бұрын
  • Wow your Amigas are in immaculate condition. Zero yellowing. Impressive.

    @boydpukalo8980@boydpukalo89802 ай бұрын
  • That very NEC monitor is the reason I have a bad back! It weighed a ton and lifting it badly was a good way to get yourself a bad back as I proved. The old days of hitting the degaus button and the potential flicker if your lighting was not optimal. I always made a point of getting my users the best monitors I could buy because people are looking at for 8+ hours a day.

    @davideyres955@davideyres9552 ай бұрын
  • Great story, thanks for the nostalgic feeling I got from it 😊

    @stephanszarafinski9001@stephanszarafinski90012 ай бұрын
    • Thanks for listening!

      @DavesGarage@DavesGarage2 ай бұрын
  • I also believe bigger is better when it comes to monitors. I have 32 inch Dell that i use daily. I've considered moving to an even larger curved monitor and your video helped move me closer to making that leap. Thanks again for your good solid reviews!

    @bobzwolinski3793@bobzwolinski37932 ай бұрын
  • Yep, just bought a LG 35 4K inch curved display to go with my Win 11 desktop. I enjoy being able to split the screen with two or more programs displayed at once.

    @CharlesinGA@CharlesinGA2 ай бұрын
  • Damn you Dave… this is a must have for me (fellow PC and Mac nerd). Thanks for sharing.

    @fl3shgordon@fl3shgordon2 ай бұрын
  • Right on. Thanks for sharing.

    @ruperterskin2117@ruperterskin21172 ай бұрын
  • I went to dual 40" HDTV's in about 2006 when TV's were finally suitable to use as a monitor. I still use 2 40" screens as monitors as well as a 23" touch screen. Love your videos and thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience!

    @codemaster442@codemaster4422 ай бұрын
  • I’ve run Dell UltraSharps at work for as long as I can remember. They’re workhorses. But Ive been stuck on 1080p for a while. Going to the real estate on my 1440p display at home is always an upgrade. I think this is the display to replace my 3 1080p UltraSharps. May even be worth my own investment if I can’t convince a requisition. Thanks, Dave!

    @Jacobhopkins117@Jacobhopkins1172 ай бұрын
  • I had an NEC Multisync back in the day. It served me well.

    @Jiburley@Jiburley2 ай бұрын
  • Dell makes a nice monitor. I’ve had a U2420 for over a decade now. No problems and still going strong.

    @tjf7101@tjf71012 ай бұрын
  • I just went through a deep dive to get a new monitor, and bought and returned several that did not work as advertised. I wanted to go with an ultrasharp, but the one I ordered did not work with KVM on my pc/mac combo. Dave, you think just like me! Jealous of that screen!!! I went for a 3440x1440 144hz from ROG with a 1900R curve. I do programming work and some gaming and it felt like the best combination of features for me 👍

    @BackForwardPunch@BackForwardPunch2 ай бұрын
  • I recall getting my first LCD monitor, Dell 24" @ $1200 CDN back in like 2004? Still works today! My kid has it, lol. This is a nice monitor!

    @bbertram2@bbertram22 ай бұрын
  • The biggest monitor I managed to snag when I worked at Microsoft was a NEC 17" multi-sync. That thing was so deep. It also helped create heat in the room I was in that had x86, mips and alpha machines all multi processor and for a time a PPC box before that was canceled.

    @DevilsHandyman@DevilsHandyman2 ай бұрын
  • I used our 2020 WFH stipend to purchase a standing desk and my first 32” Ultra-Wide IPS curved display, I’ll never go back to dual heads. And I’m one that adopted dual very early, 1993-ish on my Sun workstation, a Sparc 10 iirc with dual frame-buffers. Had two of those Sun monitors that took a forklift to get them on the desk. People though I was nuts, “why do you need two?”. Fast forward a decade and everyone wanted two. I’m over it, UW IPS any day.

    @c1ph3rpunk@c1ph3rpunk2 ай бұрын
  • You were on the NT multi-monitor dev team? Nice! I beta tested NT 4.0 back in the day, and the ability to have multiple monitors (and on Windows 98) was wonderful, having given that up in the move from Mac to PC in the early '90s. My pair of PCI Matrox Millennium cards were great for 2D work in both OSes. I also had fun playing Microsoft Flight Simulator 98 on *THREE* displays. My two old Millenniums plus some modern AGP 3D card. I, too, had "retired" professional BNC-connector displays. (Two of those at 20", plus one old 14" VGA.) I'm looking at this monitor right now. This plus a Dell/Alienware OLED 4K that has the same vertical height to sit side-by-side to replace three Samsung 4K displays - two 28" in landscape plus a 24" in portrait. I'd been waiting for an ultra-wide that has: * At least 2160 vertical pixel count * curved * >90Hz. * HDR This is the first one that hits all three bullets, and has the bonus of having a 2.5GbE port, so it will replace my Thunderbolt Dock completely. I'd also been wanting an OLED, so the "matching" (same 2160p vertical at the same viewable height) Alienware OLED seems like a great second, to replace my portrait-mode. (I mostly have it in portrait due to physical space concerns - the two curved will alleviate that in landscape next to each other.) I'll be using them split between my work laptop, personal Mac laptop, and Windows desktop. The KVM part will switch between laptop and desktop, and I'll just switch the Thunderbolt plug between personal and work laptop as needed.

    @AnonymousFreakYT@AnonymousFreakYT2 ай бұрын
  • Dave, I would love to see you do a video sometime I why so much computer equipment (especially portable stuff) requires those obnoxious power bricks. Loved this monitor review also, & I watch everything you make.

    @bradmartisius2625@bradmartisius26252 ай бұрын
  • I'm with you on CRT monitors, the last setup I had was a dual screen: big NEC multi-sync with a small, 15 inch Sony Trinitron. I watched live video on 9/11/2001 in my office on that NEC...

    @timothystockman7533@timothystockman75332 ай бұрын
  • Like you, I'm a bit of a snob for monitors too. I started with a Sony CPD-1304 CRT monitor for many years. I loved the vertically flat screen, and excellent blacks compared to the lesser monitors my friends were using. I moved to Samsung 17" 191T afterwards, and finally a Dell 30" capable of 2560x1600. Now I'm thinking of either this 40" Dell or maybe the 40" LG.

    @boostedmaniac@boostedmaniac8 күн бұрын
  • I've always been a fan of the Apple/Dell 16 by 10 monitors -- the Apple 30'' Cinema Display is still one of my favorite monitors -- especially the later upgraded ones. The fact that Dell still makes a variant of these just goes to show how good these monitors were for the time. These monitors are approaching 20 years old now.

    @penguinlust6749@penguinlust67492 ай бұрын
    • I’m running 3 Dell monitors from 2008,still going strong.

      @suspicionofdeceit@suspicionofdeceit2 ай бұрын
  • A great flashback to everyone's university days there with a quick glimpse of KA Strouds Engineering Mathematics book! I have a quad input Dell monitor now that I've had for a few years. 40" and I've got all four inputs connected to a quad output graphics card for 4 linux desktops all on the same screen. First monster CRT monitor I bought was back in the 1990s from a UK "bargain outlet" called Morgan Computers. They had a big shop right next to the railway station in Manchester. I bought it, lugged the massive box onto the train and then nearly killed myself walking home from the station with it. Should have paid for delivery...

    @frubert123@frubert1232 ай бұрын
  • This might be my new favorite channel and I barley understand your ramblings of relics from yesterday year but damn is it fascinating to learn. Thanks Dave!

    @tommyboi0@tommyboi02 ай бұрын
  • Ive been using a Dell D3221QS, 32" 60hz curved 4k for 3 years or so now. I got it for work and after seeing it in person my boss got one for himself as well. I absolutely love this display for productivity work so i can just imagine how much better their new model is. 120hz is the only thing i wish this had. It sits above a trio of 360hz alienware monitors, and by comparison it feels "laggy" i guess is the best way to describe it

    @spikederailed@spikederailed2 ай бұрын
  • As a color expert, it is nice to hear the albeit short callout on the specs of the 40". What would be more interesting on such a monitor of that size is the uniformity. A lot of larger monitors struggle to keep backlighting and color uniformity across larger spans. But it certainly looks like a heck of a piece of kit!

    @jettyjason@jettyjason2 ай бұрын
  • 13:30 As the owner of a Samsung Odyssey G9 OLED 49" 32:9 widescreen, I can relate to the feeling. The embedded software on this thing is terrible! Way too complex when all you want to do is switch inputs or maybe go to split view mode. And as soon as you unplug a device, it forgets all the settings and you have to reset everything! On the other hand, the display itself is beyond words, truly amazing. So it's sorta worth it!

    @pseudocoder78@pseudocoder782 ай бұрын
  • ok, the cabbage patch reference almost made me spew my coffee. Ever since HDMI showed up on PCs I'd been using whatever television I had around as a "monitor" (all available funds -> latest graphics cards). I finally managed to purchased a high end monitor last year and there's really no going back. Thanks for the tips! I always salute back by the way.

    @jeffalarson@jeffalarson2 ай бұрын
  • Great review Dave. I run multi PC successfully switching using Dell Display Manager. I've found the software is susceptible to cable choice. I've not worked out why one cable works over another. (and isn't cost related - some cheap cables work, whereas more expensive ones don't). Hope this helps.

    @BurningHorizons@BurningHorizons2 ай бұрын
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