Dell's latest 27-inch monitor introduces an updated menu system, several new inputs and wide colour gamut. While it won't impress professionals, it's likely to please the average user who wants a big screen.
Design
The 2709W sits on a black square base with a silver neck, with swivel, tilt and height adjustments available. The height adjustment mechanism has been inherited from the 3007WFP's rack and pinion design, rather than the lever system found on the 2707WFP and 3008WFP — and while a step up it isn't as smooth as it could be (especially from the top position). Regardless, the base is heavy enough and you should be able to find optimal positioning with little worry. Instead of the brushed aluminium look of the previous 2707WFP, the 2709 opts for the tried and true matte black, with a silver trim around the edges.
Our first worry was the seeming lack of buttons, remembering the limitations of the 3007WFP — however this was quickly blasted out of our brains by the monitor making a horrible elongated beep when turned on, as if there were an error.
Five blue lights on the right then lit up one at a time, and slowly disappeared again one by one. These are the new menu buttons. They're touch sensitive, and unlike those capacitive buttons built on a super-smooth, fingerprint-loving surface, these are part of the bezel itself, with the same matte texture. Once you're up and running, the completely unlabelled buttons disappear from sight.
You'd be forgiven then for thinking you'd never be able to find these buttons in the dark, and that it would take a while to figure out what each unmarked button does. But hold your hand near the bottom right of the bezel, and a light above the power button turns on, showing you exactly where to press — this is the menu button.
It's here where the hideous beep from before made a return, but in shorter fashion — every single button press resulting in an error-sound-esque squawk. This can thankfully be turned off, and we did so with amazing haste.
With the menu button pressed the five buttons above it light up, and a menu appears in the bottom right, context sensitive options available for each button. It's a modified version of what appeared on the Crystal and is amazingly intuitive, not to mention leagues ahead of the annoying menu that plagued the 07 and 08 series. If there's any flaw, it's that the power button is touch sensitive too, and it's all too easy to turn the monitor off by accidentally brushing your palm against it while trying to hit another button. You can even customise three of the buttons to your favourite functions, making your experience a little more "one touch".
Features
This is where Dell excels — the usual card reader at the left supports CF/xD/SD/MS/MMc and dual USB ports, while another two USB ports reside underneath. Also underneath are the video inputs, offering component, composite, two DVI ports, VGA, displayport and HDMI video in. S-video is gone, but as a bonus you get three 3.5mm jacks to support 5.1 sound when hooked up through HDMI.
The screen features a variety of preset modes: standard, multimedia, game, warm, cool, Adobe RGB, sRGB, Custom (RGB) and Custom (RGBCMY). Brightness and contrast controls are present, as is input source selection, gamma (set to either Mac or PC) and something new — a mode selection between Graphics and Video. If set to Video, the screen aspect changes, and new preset modes of Movie, Game, Sports and Nature appear, as well as the option to switch between YPbPr colour or RGB. While in graphics mode you have scaling options (labelled as "Wide Mode") of Aspect, 1:1 and Fill, but when switching to video you're presented with 16:9, 4:3 and Fill. Sharpness settings are available in increments of 10 from 0 to 100, and a zoom function is provided as well, although without the ability to determine where exactly is zoomed. Dynamic Contrast can be turned off, which we did so for our tests.
PIP and PBP are present as always, allowing for size and position adjustments, however just like other Dell monitors you can only mix an analogue signal with a digital signal, and not analogue with analogue, or digital with digital. Considering the digital ports on the screen now far outweigh the analogue ones (and for convenience, we're lumping VGA under digital even though it's not strictly correct), we can only hope this is rectified in the next revision.
Performance
Like the 2408WFP, the Standard preset mode is ridiculously over-cooked colour wise, and sRGB is far, far too undersaturated. Fortunately there's a middle ground, as Dell has included an Adobe RGB profile which we found more to our liking — however you'll want to head to Custom (RGB) or Custom (RGBCMY) to get the most out of this monitor. The white is of course, still set to retina-searing brightness, so it may take you some time to adjust if you've not used a Dell monitor before. After a lot of tweaking we managed to get a colour setting we were mostly happy with, but despite our efforts reds still seemed a little too neon for our tastes.
Sitting in the middle of the screen, it appeared as if the left and right sides were noticeably darker than the middle, turning whites a bit dirty. This possibly has more to do with how deeply set the panel is within the bezel than backlight uniformity issues, but is irritating nonetheless. Taking this into account, viewing angles were reasonable.
As a test suite for display capability, DisplayMate has never been much of a hard taskmaster for Dell's screens (excluding the first revision of the 2407 which had severe gradient issues), with all 255 greyscale tones being discernible and gradients looking just fine. Similarly, movies looked fantastic.
While colour professionals may have to wrestle a little with calibration to get the most out of it, the 2709W is likely to please your average user to no end who wants a big screen with a decent resolution.
The Dell 2709W should be available on Dell Australia's website on June 20, 2008.



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