The monitor also supports LG’s Dual Controller feature, meaning you can control two different computers plugged into it using the same mouse and keyboard. All these inputs let the screen show up to four displays at once, with LG offering customers various different configurations, including picture-in-picture.
There are two HDMI 2.0 inputs (handling 4K at 60Hz), a pair of HDMI 1.4 inputs (4K at 30Hz), one DisplayPort 1.2a input (doing 4K at 60Hz), one USB 3.1 Type-C (with a DP alt-mode for a second DisplayPort input), and a pair of regular USB 3.0 inputs for mouse and keyboard. Image: LGĬonnectivity-wise it’s got ports-a-plenty. The stand it comes with is basic, and only lets users adjust tilt, not height. Peak brightness is 350 cd/m2, and LG says it supports up to 1.07 billion colors. It’s got a non-glare coating, a contrast ratio of up to 1000:1, and decent viewing angles of 178 degrees on both the horizontal and vertical. Interested? Let’s dive in.Īs mentioned above, this is a 4K IPS panel (catalog name: 43UD79-B), measuring 42.5 inches across the diagonal, with a UHD resolution of 3840 × 2160. Oh, and it’s available for preorder for $697 (that price and these details via Anandtech), making it a decent deal to boot. It’s 42.5 inches wide, and has enough ports to show four screens at once from different sources.
Lg wide monitor manual pro#
LG’s latest monitor is a big beast aimed at pro customers used to juggling multiple displays.