Friday, June 12, 2009
Compact secondary displays, like Nanovision’s MIMO range, are useful ways of adding a little extra desktop to your computer. Connecting via USB, they sit happily next to your full-sized display or laptop. Hanwha Japan, though, have given their secondary LCD something of an odd twist: instead of using USB, it connects via a D-Sub VGA port.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjlgT1NKvnsFcnw_VCWr3py-Nyoil3TaOkY1FX0gCkEAAE4umlBLO-1BPQfGU2nG9hnQJKlrB9WkUx27dGiMfkPpuBW089TpwPzvgpXOR1Mu_L-88AwSGGonw9y1WCcvgs1mHPE5uBs7tCD/s400/hanwha_japan_vm_tl7_1-480x458.jpg)
That means you’ll need a dual-head graphics card if you want to use the WM-TL7 with your desktop, though notebook and netbook users should be fine as most have a VGA output. Specs for the 7-inch display are WVGA resolution (800 x 480), 200:1 contrast ratio and 240cd/m2 brightness; as is usually the case, response time is on the sluggish side at 30ms.
While this might seem a vaguely pointless product given the ease of use a USB DisplayLink monitor offers, it could have its strong points. DisplayLink requires some processing power to create a virtual graphics card and run the display; why not use the existing graphics card and save CPU cycles? The Hanwha Japan VM-TL7 is available in Japan now, priced at around $223.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjlgT1NKvnsFcnw_VCWr3py-Nyoil3TaOkY1FX0gCkEAAE4umlBLO-1BPQfGU2nG9hnQJKlrB9WkUx27dGiMfkPpuBW089TpwPzvgpXOR1Mu_L-88AwSGGonw9y1WCcvgs1mHPE5uBs7tCD/s400/hanwha_japan_vm_tl7_1-480x458.jpg)
That means you’ll need a dual-head graphics card if you want to use the WM-TL7 with your desktop, though notebook and netbook users should be fine as most have a VGA output. Specs for the 7-inch display are WVGA resolution (800 x 480), 200:1 contrast ratio and 240cd/m2 brightness; as is usually the case, response time is on the sluggish side at 30ms.
While this might seem a vaguely pointless product given the ease of use a USB DisplayLink monitor offers, it could have its strong points. DisplayLink requires some processing power to create a virtual graphics card and run the display; why not use the existing graphics card and save CPU cycles? The Hanwha Japan VM-TL7 is available in Japan now, priced at around $223.
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