user manual
Table Of Contents
- About This Guide
- Table of Contents
- 1. Product Features
- 2. Safety and Maintenance Guidelines
- 3. Setting Up the Monitor
- 4. Operating the Monitor
- A. Troubleshooting
- B. Technical Specifications
- C. Agency Regulatory Notices
- Federal Communications Commission Notice
- Declaration of Conformity for Products Marked with the FCC Logo (United States Only)
- Canadian Notice
- Avis Canadien
- German Ergonomics Notice
- Japanese Notice
- Korean Notice
- Power Cord Set Requirements
- Product Environmental Notices
- Disposal of Waste Equipment by Users in Private Household in the European Union

ENWW 25
LCD Monitor Quality and Pixel Policy
Your LCD Monitor uses high-precision technology, manufactured according to high
standards, to help guarantee trouble-free performance. Nevertheless, the display may
have cosmetic imperfections that appear as small bright or dark spots. This is
common to all LCD displays used in products supplied by all vendors and is not
specific to your LCD Monitor. These imperfections are caused by one or more
defective pixels or subpixels.
A pixel consists of one red, one green, and one blue subpixel. A defective whole pixel
is always turned on (a bright spot on a dark background), or it is always off (a dark
spot on a bright background). The first is the more visible of the two. A defective
subpixel (dot defect) is less visible than a defective whole pixel, and is small and only
visible on a specific background.
To locate defective pixels, the monitor should be viewed under normal operating
conditions and in normal operating mode at a supported resolution and refresh rate,
from a distance of approximately 50 cm (16 inches). We expect that, over time, the
industry will continue to improve its ability to produce displays with fewer cosmetic
imperfections, and we will adjust guidelines as improvements are made. For more
information about your LCD Monitor, refer to the HP Web site at:
http://www.hp.com/support .