Apple makes some really gorgeous-looking flat-panel displays for hooking up to a Power Mac desktop, but when it comes to serious graphic work, looks aren't everything. What most graphics professionals want from a screen is colour neutrality, reasonably high resolution, and physical adjustability in order to avoid RSI. In some of these respects, Apple doesn't manage to come close to what NEC Mitsubishi has to offer with its range of Pro screens, which are designed specifically with the high-end user in mind.
Now NEC Mitsubishi has taken its professional range of LCD monitors a significant step further with the introduction of the new SpectraView 2180 - a 21-inch LCD display that is certified to a certain colour standard, and is supplied with a viewing hood and a copy of NEC's own colour-profiling software. The software can be use in conjunction with just about any colour-profiling device on the market or, if you don't have one, you can choose to buy a device via NEC. The PR people at NEC supplied us with a Gretag MacBeth Eye-One device for our test, but other sensors such as the Monaco Optix are also compatible.
Physically, the SpectraView 2180 looks no different from the regular NEC MultiSync 2180... and that's because it isn't. The SpectraView is simply an NEC 2180 MultiSync that has been rigorously tested and then certified as being within tight colour tolerances. The only other physical difference is the addition of some magnetic strips on the display case
for affixing the supplied viewing hood that helps to shield the screen's surface from extraneous light and reflections. Using the monitor with the hood attached does look kind of dorky and a bit geeky, but the improved viewing conditions are well worth any potential embarrassment or loss of 'coolness' in the office.
The SpectraView 2180 has a native resolution of 1,600x1,200 pixels, and it's simply awesome in terms of the evenness of its illumination and the sharpness on offer. However, when it comes to the software that is shipped with the SpectraView, we have a few issues.

