But if you’re a pro who doesn’t need that, the Studio Display probably has you covered.Īpple says on its Studio Display overview page that it works with macOS to allow for “fine-tune calibration” so it sounds like creating custom modes is available just like you can with the Pro Display XDR. The big thing you’re missing with the Studio Display is HDR/Dolby Vision support with up to 1600 nits brightness. Notably, the Studio Display features support for 9 of those 11. Reference modesĪpple’s Pro Display XDR excels for pros with 11 different reference modes (plus custom ones). Interestingly, even with a metal build, the Studio Display is lighter than the LG UltraFine. ✅ (tilt only incl., $400 for height + tilt stand) The Studio Display takes design cues from the Pro Display XDR and the M1 iMac. The design and build quality alone are enough for many to choose Apple’s Studio Display over the LG UltraFine. Apple Studio Display tidbits: ‘Hey Siri’ for connected Mac, A13 handling, Center Stage onboarding, more. That enables the valuable Center Stage feature for video calls and offers a 122-degree field of view.įunny enough, Apple doesn’t mention 1080p on its Studio Display tech spec sheet at all, however, it did say at the “Peek performance” event that it’s the same camera as in the iPad Pro – and that specs page does indeed mention 1080p.ġ2 MP ultra wide, f/2.4 aperture, 122-degree view, supports 1080pĪnother advantage for the Apple Studio Display vs LG UltraFine and the Pro Display XDR is a built-in 6-speaker audio system (4 force-canceling woofers and 2 tweeters) that can play Spatial Audio and Apple’s studio-quality 3-mic array. The Studio Display is the first piece of hardware Apple has put its impressive 12 MP ultra wide camera outside of the iPad Pro/Air. Apple Studio Display works with Windows, but there are limitations.iPad Pro 12.9-inch (3rd generation or later)Īpple also says Studio Display works with PCs, but with caveats:.Here are the Macs and iPads compatible with Apple Studio Display: With the lower bandwidth need of a 4K panel, the LG UltraFine 24-inch features an upstream and downstream Thunderbolt port plus 3 USB-C ports. However, Studio Display stands out with up to 10 Gbps speed for its USB-C ports that use USB 3.1 Gen 2. ConnectivityĪll of these displays feature Thunderbolt 3 for single-cable connectivity with 3 additional USB-C ports for peripherals. Pro Display XDR has more flexibility with refresh rates ranging from 47.95 to 60Hz.īut both the Studio Display and Pro Display XDR come with the optional nano-texture display upgrade that further reduces glare for those in bright workspaces. For the trade-offs compared to the Pro Display XDR, there’s no HDR support/1600 nits HDR brightness.Īnd of course, the Studio Display is a 27-inch screen vs the 32-inch of the Pro Display XDR. With the Studio Display, you’re getting a slightly brighter 5K panel than the LG UltraFine (600 vs 500 nits). However, for those that are more budget-conscious, depending on the Studio Display configuration, keep in mind you could buy 2-3 of the $700 LG UltraFine 4K displays. With a starting price tag just $300 above the LG UltraFine 5K and some of the appealing attributes of the $5,000+ Pro Display XDR, the Studio Display offers a compelling package in the $1,599-$2,299 range.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |