11/21/2023 0 Comments Spamsieve review![]() Tilt doesn’t lock to perfect 180 deg and the tilt radius is not even. Tilts way more to the left than to the right. No height adjustability in vertical position sucks. Source is the XDR is exhibiting some serious early signs of. Viewing angles are so bad that you get corner vignetting looking head on. It messes with the light roll off and color even! That’s the most disappointing part to me. PCMag this week published its full review of the Pro Display XDR, doing a deep dive into its color accuracy and HDR capabilities. ![]() In a nutshell, PCMag believes that the Pro Display XDR successfully does what it was meant to do, offer up “reference-quality production capabilities” to those who work on Macs. “The Pro Display XDR is a beautifully made, well-designed, hyper-accurate content creation monitor that-say it with me now-‘just works,’” reads the review. Teoh has a great YouTube channel where he reviews displays and TVs, with technical analysis married with more subjective reporting. So when he turned his attention to Pro Display XDR I knew things could get interesting. Pro Display XDR might be costly at $4,999, but it’s a fraction of the cost of Sony’s own reference monitor.Īnd that’s exactly what happened when Teoh compared the display with Sony’s $43,000 monitor.Īt first, you might think that’s unfair. But this is the same monitor Apple called out at WWDC when it first announced Pro Display XDR. And it made a big song and dance about the new screen being “the world’s best pro display”. So, is it?Īpple was kind enough to lend me a 28-core Mac Pro, decked out with a 2.5GHz Intel Xeon W (turbo boost to 4.4GHz) having a single 38.5MB 元 cache, 1MB L2 cache per core, 384GB of 2933MHz DDR4 ECC memory, a 4TB SSD, and two AMD Radeon Pro Vega II Duo 2x32GB graphics cards (each with two GPUs, for a total of four GPUs). ![]() Priced out on Apple’s website, this configuration goes for an eye-popping $31,199 ($10,800 of that is for the GPUs alone). Whereas the iMac Pro tops out at 970 gigaflops with all 18 cores, the Mac Pro surpasses that level with just 13 cores and goes on to top out at 1.5 teraflops on 28 cores. ![]()
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