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Comparison Samsung S24F356F 24 " vs Samsung S24F350F 24 "

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Samsung S24F356F 24 "
Samsung S24F350F 24 "
Samsung S24F356F 24 "Samsung S24F350F 24 "
from $237.00
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from $138.00 up to $179.32
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Product typemonitormonitor
Size24 "24 "
Screen
Panel typePLSPLS
Surface treatmentmattematte
Resolution1920x1080 (16:9)1920x1080 (16:9)
Pixel size0.31 mm0.27 mm
Response time (GtG)4 ms4 ms
Refresh rate60 Hz60 Hz
Vertical viewing angle178 °178 °
Horizontal viewing angle178 °178 °
Brightness250 cd/m²250 cd/m²
Static contrast1 000:11 000:1
Colour depth16.7 million colours (6 bits + FRC)
Colour space (NTSC)72 %72 %
Connection
Video transmission
VGA
1xHDMI
VGA
1xHDMI
Features
Features
Flicker-Free
AMD FreeSync
Flicker-Free
AMD FreeSync
General
Wall mountVESA 75x75mmVESA 75x75mm
Power consumption25 W25 W
Dimensions (WxHxD)547.7x423.5x218.8 mm547.7x418x206.5 mm
Weight3.3 kg3.3 kg
Color
Added to E-Catalogoctober 2016may 2016

Pixel size

The size of one dot (pixel) on a monitor screen. This parameter is related to the maximum resolution of the monitor and its diagonal size — the higher the resolution, the smaller the pixel size (with the same diagonal) and vice versa, the larger the diagonal, the larger the size of one pixel (with the same resolution). The smaller the size of one pixel, the clearer the image will be displayed by the monitor, the less grainy it will be noticeable, which is especially important on large monitors. On the other hand, a small pixel size creates discomfort when working with fine details and text — this mainly applies to monitors with a small diagonal.

Colour depth

The colour depth supported by the monitor.

This parameter characterizes the number of shades that the screen can display. And here it is worth recalling that the image in modern monitors is based on 3 basic colours — red, green, blue (RGB scheme). And the number of bits is indicated not for the entire screen, but for each base colour. For example, 6 bits (the minimum colour depth for modern monitors) means that the screen is capable of producing 2 ^ 6, that is, 64 shades of red, green and blue; the total number of shades will be 64 * 64 * 64 = 262,144 (0.26 million). An 8-bit colour depth (256 shades for each base colour) already gives a total of 16.7 million colours; and the most advanced modern monitors support 10-bit colour, allowing you to work with more than a billion shades.

Screens with support for FRC technology are worth a special mention; nowadays, you can find models marked " 6 bit + FRC " and " 8 bit + FRC ". This technology was developed to improve picture quality in situations where the incoming video signal has a greater colour depth than the screen, such as when 10-bit video is fed to an 8-bit matrix. If such a screen supports FRC, the picture on it will be noticeably better than on a regular 8-bit monitor (although somewhat worse than on a full-fledged 10-bit monitor, but “8 bit + FRC” screens are much...cheaper).

High colour depth is important primarily for professional graphics and other tasks that require high colour fidelity. On the other hand, such features significantly affect the cost of the monitor. In addition, it is worth remembering that the quality of colour reproduction depends not only on the colour depth, but also on other parameters — in particular, colour gamut (see below).
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