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HUAWEI MateView GT 34'' Ultrawide Curved Gaming Monitor, 165Hz, 21:9 WQHD 3440 x 1440, 3K+, 1500R, Cinema-Level P3 Colour, 1.07 Billion Colours, HDR, TÜV Rheinland, 5-Way Joystick, HDMI, DP, Black

£9.9£99Clearance
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The pixel pitch shows the distance from the centers of two neighboring pixels. In displays, which have a native resolution (the TFT ones, for example), the pixel pitch depends on the resolution and the size of the screen.

With two 5w speakers, the soundbar is a handy addition and definitely better than standard monitor speakers but it won’t replace the sound quality or oomph of dedicated speakers. I do love the way you can adjust the sound volume by sliding your finger along the light stripe. Very cool Huawei. Overall, the Huawei MateView GT isn’t a slam dunk as a pure gaming panel. The mediocre pixel response sees to that. But as an all-round, do-everything screen that looks great in both image quality and styling terms, it's got a lot going for it, especially when you consider the competitive pricing. Switching over to the sRGB colour profile delivered an improved Delta E of 0.62 and a marginally better colour temperature of 6052K, so that’s worth using if you’d prefer a more realistic image. The MateView also displayed 99.6% of the sRGB gamut at 133.9%, so it’ll serve up every shade required with lashings of vitality. And, happily, these results were maintained at the Huawei’s maximum brightness of 500 nits. It’s a solid specification, and the MateView is interesting on the outside: the Huawei’s base contains a soundbar with two 5W speakers. The Huawei has a microphone, too, and a band of touch-sensitive, customisable RGB LEDs across the front of the soundbar adjust the volume. These monitors are larger and pricier than the Huawei, granted, but another, less expensive favorite, the 2,560x1,440 Razer Raptor 27, covers 162% of the sRGB gamut, and the 32-inch Corsair Xeneon 32QHD165 does even more (194%), though neither monitor gets as bright as the others. Huawei MateView GT review: PerformanceHUAWEI หน้าจอในที่นี้หมายถึงหน้าจอเป็นสี่เหลี่ยมผืนผ้าทรงมาตรฐาน และขนาดจะวัดตามความยาวของเส้นทแยงมุม (วัดเส้นทแยงมุมตามพื้นผิวหน้าจอ) The high resolution stretches across a 28.2in diagonal, which means images are pin-sharp – the density level of 163ppi means you’ll get crisp and detailed imagery in creative apps and everyday tools. There are various panel technologies. Each has its own specific features - viewing angles, color reproduction, response time, brightness/contrast, production cost, etc. The image quality depends directly on the type of the display panel used.

My calibration results showed that the GT has 100% of the sRGB, 83% of AdobeRGB and 88% of the P3 colour spaces. I was more than happy to use the GT for my colour work in Lightroom. Huawei’s panel has wireless and Bluetooth connectivity, which delivers handy new functionality. If you’ve got a Huawei smartphone you can mirror its screen on the display using NFC wireless projection. You can wirelessly project your PC’s display to the screen, albeit at lesser resolutions than the panel’s huge native figure. You can connect a keyboard and mouse with Bluetooth and use those to control your PC or laptop, and you can link more Huawei devices together using HarmonyOS. The Huawei’s 165Hz refresh rate is good enough for mainstream gaming, including mainstream esports titles, and AMD FreeSync ensures smooth performance in every title. The big single-player titles are smooth on this panel. What about those response numbers, then? Huawei provides four levels of user-configurable overdrive in the OSD menu. It can also be turned entirely off. None provide pixel response performance that we're totally happy with. Level two and below is pretty blurry. The fastest setting, level four, is certainly sharper, but also comes with some fairly nasty overshoot and ghosting. Level three has a bit of blur and a whiff of overshoot, but is probably the best compromise. Size class of the display as declared by the manufacturer. Often this is the rounded value of the actual size of the diagonal in inches.

Don’t look to the Huawei if you’re a gamer, either. The MateView’s extra height means it uses 9.8 million pixels, which is over a million more than a conventional 4K panel. You’ll need a hugely powerful GPU to properly power this panel, and it only has a 60Hz refresh rate and 8ms response time anyway. The MateView GT is a better option there.

Approximate height of the display. If the manufacturer does not provide such information, the height is calculated from the diagonal and the aspect ratio. The percentage of the approximate area, taken by the active part of the screen, to the total front area. HUAWEI ผ่านการทดสอบที่ดำเนินการภายใต้สภาวะที่เจาะจง สำหรับข้อมูลเพิ่มเติม โปรดดูรายละเอียดผลิตภัณฑ์ที่กล่าวไว้ข้างต้น ข้อมูลจริงอาจแตกต่างกันไปตามความแตกต่างของผลิตภัณฑ์แต่ละประเภท รุ่นของซอฟต์แวร์ เงื่อนไขการใช้งาน และปัจจัยด้านสภาพแวดล้อม ข้อมูลทั้งหมดขึ้นอยู่กับการใช้งานจริง The Huawei MateView GT is the firm’s first gaming monitor, and it’s an unexpected move from the well-known phone manufacturer. The downside of VA, often enough, is pixel response. Huawei claims 4ms, which is a tad tardy in a gaming context. However, on-paper pixel response specs rarely tell the whole story, so hold that thought. Meanwhile, the MateView's refresh rate tops out at 165Hz. While that's nothing special in this age of 360Hz-plus panels, it's also enough for all but a small fringe of gamers who need the absolute lowest possible latency.The ratio between the horizontal and the vertical side of the display. Some of the standard and widely used aspect ratios are 4:3, 5:4, 16:9 and 16:10.

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