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August 18, 2008 12:45 PM PDT

LG's Flatron W2252TE: It's green, but is it any good?

by Rory Reid

So you wanna save the Earth, huh? You've got two options: you can visit the Surya nightclub in London and dance on its electricity-generating dance floor, or you can buy an LG Flatron W2252TE monitor.

LG Flatron W2252TE

LG Flatron W2252TE: Greenest monitor in the world?

(Credit: LG)

It might sound like some sort of futuristic tank, but the W2252TE, which we first told you about in June, is reportedly the world's most eco-friendly monitor. LG reckons it sucks just 22W in use and as little as 0.3W in standby mode.

We tested these claims, and to our delight, it drew just 18.8W in use and less than 0.1W in standby mode. To put things in perspective, other 22-inch monitors tend to draw somewhere in the region of 40W.

So it's genuinely green, but is it any good? Well, yes. The 22-inch panel runs at 1,680x1,050 pixels, the screen isn't horribly glossy, it has a 10,000:1 dynamic contrast ratio, 2ms response time, an HDCP-compliant DVI port, and the image reproduction is very, very good.

Don't think for a second that LG is simply scaling back the brightness of the backlight to save power--the W2252TE beams very solidly despite its claimed maximum of 250cd/m2.

One thing we're not sure about are the ridiculous photo effects that can be accessed via the monitor's "Fun" button at the front. This lets you activate monochrome and sepia tone modes, and--most bizarrely of all--a Gaussian blur mode. Yes, the Flatron W2252TE has a blur mode. You can intentionally blur everything on the screen so you can't see anything properly. Seriously, LG, WTF?

The Flatron W2252TE will be available later this month for around $372.

(Via Crave UK)

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Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by markntravis August 18, 2008 12:49 PM PDT
Whats with the "dynamic contrast ratio"? How about a real contrast ratio? What is it?
Reply to this comment
by guncn August 22, 2008 9:37 AM PDT
it's good but toooooooooooooooo expensive.
Reply to this comment
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