Typical price: £1,049
What is it: 23-inch LCD monitor
What we think: Apple's 23-inch Cinema HD Display is low on extras and high on price. Still, one look at this gorgeous LCD and you'll be sold on it
Apple Cinema HD Display (23-inch) Review
Reviewed on: 15 September 2004
Apple's latest line of Cinema HD Displays (available in 20-inch, 23-inch and 30-inch models) ushers in a renewed spirit of cross-platform cooperation. Thanks to a DVI connector on every Cinema HD Display, PC users can now enjoy the fabulous design and stunning image quality that Apple aficionados have been luxuriating in since the iMac.
The 23-inch Cinema HD Display, in particular, is a looker. It's so lovely that we're willing to forgive its high price (£1,049 inc. VAT, as of May 2005), limited adjustability and lack of video inputs. In fact, hooking it up to a comparatively hideous Intel-based PC feels like such a crime that we're beginning to suspect an ulterior motive on Apple's part. How much was that Apple Power Mac G5 again?
Design
The Cinema HD Display's design leaves no detail overlooked. The sleek, 18mm brushed-aluminium bezel is unblemished by anything so vulgar as a power button (it's tucked discreetly into the right-side edge of the display), and the aluminium neck and base form a simple, elegant L shape that's both completely stable and smooth enough on the bottom to turn and slide easily across your desktop.
As you contemplate the Cinema HD Display's pristine beauty, you'll notice small, elegant details, such as the oval cable pass-through ringed with white plastic; the single white cord, which meets the glossy white power brick and splits into signal, power, USB and FireWire cables; and the DVI connector, which also wears a tidy, white, iPod-style suit.
The simple design, however, limits the adjustments you can make to the display panel. The neck height is fixed, so very tall users may have to set the Cinema Display on a riser (although it's almost painful to contemplate sullying the display's minimalist appearance with such a device). Also, unlike many large LCDs, the Cinema HD lacks the ability to pivot between Portrait and Landscape modes -- a feature that would have made it even easier to view legal documents and Web pages.
But although the display doesn't have a hinge or a lazy Susan for swivelling left and right, the slippery aluminium base lets you accomplish the same thing by sliding the monitor around. The panel also tilts back and forth about 20 degrees and 5 degrees, respectively -- it's by far the smoothest, easiest tilt function we've ever seen in an LCD.
Features
This generation of Cinema Displays marks Apple's return to a DVI connection (after years of using a proprietary ADC connection), making the Cinema HD Display PC-compatible. Also, for the first time, the new Cinema HD Displays are compatible with VESA mounts, allowing you to attach the monitors to walls.
But unlike many jumbo LCDs that incorporate home entertainment features such as picture-in-picture, a TV tuner or composite and S-Video ports, the Cinema Display provides only two USB and two FireWire ports. We're willing to forgive these omissions because this LCD looks so pretty, but you should know that you can get these video extras in a 23-inch LCD (such as the HP L2035) that costs considerably less than the Apple Cinema HD Display.
If you're using the Cinema Display with a Wintel machine, the only adjustment you can make to the display's image is to its brightness. The touch-sensitive brightness-control buttons are nestled out of sight along the right-side edge of the panel (below the power button) and blend perfectly with the white plastic end pieces. Luckily, the image quality is so good that the average Wintel user won't miss the ability to tweak contrast or individual colour values. When we hooked it up to our Power Mac G4, we were able to tweak the image using Apple's Display Calibrator Assistant.
Performance
Our DisplayMate intensity and greyscale test screens revealed some obvious colour-tracking errors; very light greys have a distinctly pinkish hue. Otherwise, we see very little hue shift in the Cinema HD Display's nicely linear progression from black to white. Our only other criticism is one that's common for LCDs: there's a fair amount of ghosting in high-contrast test screens; the display seems to have trouble switching from black to grey and back to black again without leaving reverse video trails.
But overall, the display looks stunning: colours are vibrant and warm, details are crisply rendered, and video looks quite smooth and free of noise (video playback looks even better when you hook the display up to a G5). Text also looks very sharp, with excellent contrast; the monitor does a great job reproducing pure, bright whites and dark blacks.
Service & support
Given that the Cinema HD Display is significantly more expensive than competing LCDs, we're disappointed with its skimpy one-year warranty. The industry standard for LCDs is three years -- appropriate for a piece of hardware this expensive.
Edited by Charles McLellan
Additional editing by Nick Hide
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