Dell UltraSharp UP2414Q review

A superb display, but you're paying through the nose for a mere 24-inches

Dell Ultrasharp UP2414Q

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As for broader specifications, we are in a transitional period regards our understanding of these latest super-high res panels. Dell, for instance, does detail the panel type as IPS where the larger Asus is said to use an IGZO panel.

However, our understanding of IGZO is that it's a distinction in terms of the semi-conductor circuitry in the panel, the materials used therein. In other words, not the pixels or type of liquid crystal technology as per IPS, VA or TN. Put another way, can you have a panel that is both IPS and IGZO. If we had to guess, we'd say the Asus is just that.

Dell UltraSharp UP2414Q

HDMI and Displayports

Of course, you'll need HDMI 2.0 compliance at the output end. But the good news is that most recent performance graphics cards sport DisplayPort. The HDMI issues with 4K are largely a problem for HDTVs.

Finally, there's a fully adjustable chassis, with tilt, rotate, swivel and height tweakability. And that pretty much sums Dell's new 4K effort on paper. What's it actually like to look at? Utterly stunning is the first impression. Even the epic Asus can't match the crispness and sharpness that's a result of cramming all those pixels into a relatively small panel.

So just like super-high DPI phones and tablets, you almost don't feel like you are looking at an active display. You essentially can't see individual pixels, they're simply too small. That gives the UP2414Q a wonderfully seamless feel.

The colours are gorgeous, too, though admittedly no more so than any high-end IPS screen. They all look spectacular these days. The same goes for the results in our objective image quality test. Gradient rendering, viewing angles, white and black scales: all immaculate and super sexy, just like other pricey IPS screens.

Then there's actually using this 4K beauty for multimedia larks. Not that there's much 4K video content to watch. But what there is… by science, it's utterly beautiful. It more or less ruins you for standard 1080p HD content. Once you've seen 4K, there's no going back.

Contributor

Technology and cars. Increasingly the twain shall meet. Which is handy, because Jeremy (Twitter) is addicted to both. Long-time tech journalist, former editor of iCar magazine and incumbent car guru for T3 magazine, Jeremy reckons in-car technology is about to go thermonuclear. No, not exploding cars. That would be silly. And dangerous. But rather an explosive period of unprecedented innovation. Enjoy the ride.