Samsung today announced the upcoming U.S. launch of its ViewFinity S9 display, which is designed to compete with the Studio Display from Apple. The…
Samsung today announced the upcoming U.S. launch of its ViewFinity S9 display, which is designed to compete with the Studio Display from Apple. The…
A lot of Apple users feel the Studio Display’s overpriced, so it’s interesting that Samsung isn’t competing on price.
If I were deciding between the two, and it didn’t come down to unique features like portrait mode, then I’d want to see them side by side in a brightly lit room. The regular (non nano-texture) Studio Display handles most reflections decently well, but if the ViewFinity does much better then I can see that being a plus for an office setting where you have lights or windows behind you. I’m sure the nano-texture does better yet, but it has some trade-offs and cleaning requirements that make me very reluctant to recommend it. (I don’t like that the wording above suggests nano-texture is a regular matte glass. It’s not. It’s better in many ways, but it’s not for everyone.)