
ViewSonic N2060W review
Last reviewed
Despite being more at home on super-sized screens, there's a growing demand for hi-def in places other than the living room. ViewSonic joins the list of companies bringing hi-def to the bedroom with the N2060W
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Despite being more at home on super-sized screens, there's a growing demand for hi-def in places other than the living room. ViewSonic joins the list of companies bringing hi-def to the bedroom with the N2060W

Viewsonic is best known for its computer monitors, but the company has clearly decided that it's time to cash in on the hi-def revolution by launching a range of HD-ready LCD TVs
How does 40-inch of flatscreen luxury for a little over £1,500 grab you? On price alone, this 40-inch LCD TV gives plasma a run for its money. A 40-inch LCD TV for this price can't deliver the visual goods, can it?
While 32in LCD TVs now regularly sell for what can realistically be called a 'mainstream' price, screen makers have traditionally struggled to make screens bigger than that anything like as affordable

After staring longingly at those huge screens in high street shops in the run-up to Christmas, before deciding that casually spending a few grand really wasn't an option, the price tag clinging to this 37in LCD could be a sight for sore eyes.

Last issue's awards heaped praise on 32in, HD-ready LCD TVs that managed to combine good pictures with prices as low as £1,200. Imagine our surprise, then, when this LCD from Viewsonic...
The N3200W is reasonably attractive thanks to its swish combination of grey inner frame and polished black outer frame. It also feels more robust than some budget rivals, too. However, the detachable grey speakers look a bit bland by comparison
To date, ViewSonic has wowed with its dabbles in the LCD TV market, in price, connectivity and performance. With each foray, lessons have been learned and criticisms heeded. Now its 27in set arrives and, bar one obvious omission....
When a fairly basic-spec screen such as this nicely priced, 27in LCD comes into our test rooms, we try to forget about fancy features like high-def and clever picture processing, and tone down our expectations accordingly
ViewSonic's latest screen, the N2750W, is possibly both the cheapest 27in LCD on the market. What's more, despite the absence of digital inputs,its component video inputs and hi-def-friendly screen resolution mean that....
This 32in LCD from ViewSonic - like the identically-sized set from Toshiba elsewhere in this group test - is approaching the big-screen territory that so many of us hanker after for watching DVD movies.
ViewSonic snuck in on the blind-side with its 30in LCD TV debut, the N3000W. Now the company has taken a second bite of the cherry and produced a superior screen in almost every respect.
2005 is going to be an exciting year for flatscreen bargain hunters. Here we're taking a look at ViewSonic's largest NextVision LCD TV, the N3200w, a 32-incher costing £300 less than the company's excellent 30in N3000w set
Five inches bigger than the Sagem LCD opposite is this 32in from US company ViewSonic, which manages to pack some equally as interesting features onto an impressively HD-ready TV.
Coming straight out of the LCD computer monitor market, ViewSonic would appear to have the necessary technological know-how to impress the average man on the street...
Once a strictly PC-only brand, ViewSonic is now making its mark in the AV world, too. So, it's with a healthy degree of anticipation that we get stuck into ViewSonic's latest offering, the 20in N2010.As with previous ViewSonic products...