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Philips 191e1sb User Manual

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    United States Guarantee
    MODEL # ________________________________________________ 
    SERIAL # ________________________________________________
     
    This warranty gives you specific legal rights. You may have other rights\
     which vary from state/
    province to state/province.
    Before contacting Philips, please prepare the following details so we ca\
    n solve your problem 
    quickly. 
    l     Philips type number 
    l     Philips serial number 
    l     Purchase date (copy of purchase may be required) 
    l     PC environment Processor: 
    m     286/386/486/Pentium Pro/Internal memory 
    m     Operating system (Windows, DOS, OS/2, Apple Macintosh) 
    m     Fax/Modem/Internet program? 
    l     Other cards installed 
    Having the following information available will also help speed up the p\
    rocess: 
    l     Your proof of purchase indicating: date of purchase, dealer name, model \
    and product serial 
    number.
     
    l     The full address to which the swap model should be delivered. 
     
    Just a phone call away
    Philips’ customer help desks are located worldwide. Within the U.S. y\
    ou can contact Philips 
    customer care Monday-Friday from 8:00 AM-9:00 PM Eastern Time (ET) and\
     on Saturdays from 
    10:00 AM-5:00 PM ET hrs by using one of the contact phone numbers. 
     
    For more information on this and more great Philips products visit our w\
    ebsite at:
    Website: http://www.philips.com
      
     
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    United States Guarantee
          
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    Glossary
      
           
     
      
      
      
      
      
     
    Glossary
    A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 
    A
    Active matrix 
     
    This is a kind of liquid crystal display structure in which switching tr\
    ansistors are attached to each 
    pixel to control the on/off voltage. It produces a brighter and sharper \
    display with a broader viewing 
    angle than a passive matrix display. Also refer to TFT (thin film trans\
    istor).
     
    Amorphous silicon (a-Si)
    A semiconductor material that is used to make the thin film transistors \
    (TFTs) layer of an active 
    matrix LCD.
     
    Aspect ratio
    The width-to-height ratio of the active area of a display. In general, m\
    ost monitors have an aspect 
    ratio of 4:3. Wide monitors or TVs have an aspect ratio of 16:9 or 16:10\
    .
    B
    Backlight
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    Glossary
    The light source for a transmissive LCD. There are two techniques used i\
    n nowaday LCD designs. 
    Most TFT LCD panels use CCFLs (cold cathode fluorescent light) and a d\
    iffuser panel directly 
    behind the liquid crystal layer. New technology using Light Emitting Dio\
    des (LED) are still under 
    development.
     
    Brightness
    The dimension of color that is referred to an achromatic scale, ranging \
    from black to white, also 
    called lightness or luminous reflectance. Because of confusion with satu\
    ration, the use of this term 
    should be discouraged.
     
    C 
    CCFL(cold cathode fluorescent light)
    These are the fluorescent light tubes providing the light for the LCD mo\
    dule. These tubes are 
    generally very thin, approximately 2 mm in diameter.
     
    Chromaticity
    That part of color specification, which does not involve illuminance. Ch\
    romaticity is two-dimensional 
    and specified by pairs of numbers such as dominant wavelength and purity\
    .
     
    CIE (Commission International de IEclairage)
    The International Commission on Illumination, the primary international \
    organization concerned with 
    color and color measurement.
     
    Color temperature
    A measurement of the color of light radiated by an object while it is be\
    ing heated. This 
    measurement is express in terms of absolute scale, (degrees Kelvin). L\
    ower Kelvin temperatures 
    such as 2400° K are red; higher temperatures such as 9300° K are b\
    lue. Neutral temperature is 
    white, at 6504° K. Philips monitors generally offers 9300° K, 6500\
    ° K, and user define.
     
    Contrast
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    Glossary
    The luminance variation between light and dark areas in an image.
     
    Contrast ratio
    The ratio of luminance between the brightest white pattern and the darke\
    st black pattern. 
     
     
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    D
    D-SUB 
    A VGA Analog input connector. Your monitor comes with a D-Sub cable.
     
    Digital Visual Interface (DVI)
    The Digital Visual Interface (DVI) specification provides a high-speed\
     digital connection for visual 
    data types that is display technology independent. The interface is prim\
    arily focused at providing a 
    connection between a computer and its display device. The DVI specificat\
    ion meets the needs of all 
    segments of the PC industry (workstation, desktop, laptop, etc.) and w\
    ill enable these different 
    segments to unite around one monitor interface specification.
    The DVI interface enables:
    1.  Reduce signal loss and video noise in signal due to less signal conversi\
    on.
    2.  Independent from display technology, and can be used on LCD, Plasma, LCO\
    S, etc.
    3.  Plug and play through hot plug detection, EDID and DDC2B.
    4.  Digital and Analog support in a single connector (DVI-I only). 
     
     
     
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    E
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    Glossary
    Energy Star Computers Program
    An energy conservation program launched by the US Environmental Protecti\
    on Agency (EPA), 
    promotes the manufacture and marketing of energy-efficient office automa\
    tion equipment. 
    Companies joining this program, must be willing to commit themselves to \
    manufacture one or more 
    products capable of going into a low -power state (< 30 W) either afte\
    r a period of inactivity, or after 
    a predetermined time selected by the user.
     
     
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    G
    Gamma
    Screen luminance as a function of video voltage approximately follows a \
    mathematical power 
    function of the input video signal, the exponent of which is called gamm\
    a.
     
    Grayscale
    An achromatic scale ranging from black through a series of successively \
    lighter grays to white. 
    Such a series may be made up of steps, which appear to be equally distan\
    t from one another. If the 
    Analog/ Digital converter is 8 bit, then the monitor can display at most\
     2
    8 = 256 levels. For a color 
    monitor, R.G.B. each color hads 256 levels. Thus, total color can displa\
    y is 256x256x256= 16.7 
    million.
     
     
    H
     
    Hue
    The main attribute of a color that distinguishes it from other colors. F\
    or example, a color may have a 
    green, yellow, or purple hue. Color defined as having hue are know as ch\
    romatic colors. White, 
    black, and grays possess no hue.
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    Glossary
     
    I
    IPS (In Plane Switching)
    A technique of improving the viewing angle of an LCD where the liquid cr\
    ystal molecules are 
    switched in the plane of the LCD layer rather than vertical to it.
     
    L
    LCD (liquid crystal display)
    A display composed of liquid crystal suspended between two transparent s\
    heets. The display is 
    composed thousands of pixels which can be turned on or off with electric\
    al stimulation. Thus, 
    colorful images/texts can be generated.
     
     
    Liquid crystal
    The compound found in liquid crystal displays. Liquid crystal reacts pre\
    dictably when electrically 
    stimulated. This makes it the ideal compound to turn LCD pixels on or \
    off. Liquid crystal is 
    sometimes abbreviated as LC.
     
    Luminance
    A measure of the brightness or luminous intensity of light, usually expr\
    essed in units of Candelas 
    per square meter (cd/m2) or foot Lamberts. 1 fL=3.426 cd/m2.
     
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    N
        
     
     
     
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    Glossary
    Nit
    A unit of luminance equal to 1 cd/m2 or 0.292 ftL.
    P
    Pixel
    PICture Element; the smallest element on a computerized CRT or LCD image\
    , and hence a display.
     
    Polarizer
    A light filter which only allows light waves of a certain rotation throu\
    gh. Polarized material with 
    perpendicular filtering is used in LCDs to enclose the liquid crystal. T\
    he liquid crystal is then used 
    as the medium which twists the light waves 90° in order to allow the \
    light to pass through or not.
    R
    Refresh rate
    The number of times per second the screen is refreshed or redrawn. This \
    number is usually stated 
    in Hz (Hertz) or cycles per second. A rate of 60 Hz is equal to 60 tom\
    es per second.
     
    S 
     
    sRGB 
     
    sRGB is a standard for ensuring correct exchange of colors between diffe\
    rent devices (e.g. digital 
    cameras, monitors, printers, scanners, etc.)
    Using a standard unified color space, sRGB will help represent pictures \
    taken by an sRGB 
    compatible device correctly on your sRGB enabled Philips monitors. In th\
    at way, the colors are 
    calibrated and you can rely on the correctness of the colors shown on yo\
    ur screen.
    Important with the use of sRGB is that the brightness and contrast of yo\
    ur monitor is fixed to a 
    predefined setting as well as the color gamut. Therefore it is important\
     to select the sRGB setting in 
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    Glossary
    the monitors OSD.
    To do so, open the OSD by pressing the OK button on the front of your mo\
    nitor. Move the down 
    button to go to Color and press OK again. Use the right button to go to \
    sRGB. Then move the down 
    button and press OK again to exit the OSD.
    After this, please do not change the brightness or contrast setting of y\
    our monitor. If you change 
    either of these, the monitor will exit the sRGB mode and go to a color t\
    emperature setting of 6500K.
    Other: 
    USB plug: An upstream and a downstream USB plug is provide for users co\
    nvenience.
    T
    TFT(thin film transistor)
    Usually made from amorphous silicon (a-Si) and used as a switch to a c\
    harge storage device 
    located below each sub-pixel on an active matrix LCD.
     
    U 
    USB or Universal Serial Bus
    A smart plug for PC peripherals. USB automatically determines resources (like driver software and 
    bus bandwidth) required by peripherals. USB makes necessary resources a\
    vailable without user 
    intervention.
    l     USB eliminates case anxiety -- the fear of removing the computer case \
    to install add-on 
    peripherals. USB also eliminates adjustment of complicated IRQ settings \
    when installing 
    new peripherals. 
    l     USB does away with port gridlock. Without USB, PCs are normally limite\
    d to one printer, 
    two Com port devices (usually a mouse and modem), one Enhanced Paralle\
    l Port add-on 
    (scanner or video camera, for example) and a joystick. More and more p\
    eripherals for 
    multimedia computers arrive on the market every day. With USB, up to 127\
     devices can run 
    simultaneously on a computer. 
    l     USB permits hot plug-in. Theres no need to shut down, plug in, reboot\
     and run set-up to 
    install peripherals. And no need to go through the reverse process to un\
    plug a device. 
    In short, USB transforms todays Plug-and-Pray into true Plug-and-Play\
    ! 
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    Glossary
    Hub 
    A Universal Serial Bus device that provides additional connections to th\
    e Universal Serial Bus. 
    Hubs are a key element in the plug-and-play architecture of USB. The Fig\
    ure shows a typical hub. 
    Hubs serve to simplify USB connectivity from the users perspective prov\
    iding low cost and 
    complexity.
    Hubs are wiring concentrators and enable the multiple attachment charact\
    eristics of USB. 
    Attachment points are referred to as ports. Each hub converts a single a\
    ttachment point into 
    multiple attachment points. The architecture supports concatenation of m\
    ultiple hubs. 
    The upstream port of a hub connects the hub towards the host. Each of th\
    e other downstream ports 
    of a hub allows connection to another hub or function. Hubs can detect, \
    attach and detach at each 
    downstream port and enable the distribution of power to downstream devic\
    es. Each downstream 
    port can be individually enabled and configured at either full or low sp\
    eed. The hub isolates low 
    speed ports from full speed signaling. 
    A hub consists of two portions: the Hub Controller and Hub Repeater. The\
     repeater is a protocol-
    controlled switch between the upstream port and downstream ports. It als\
    o has hardware support 
    for reset and suspend/resume signaling. The controller provides the inte\
    rface registers to allow 
    communication to/from the host. Hub specific status and control commands\
     permit the host to 
    configure a hub and to monitor and control its ports. 
    Device 
    A logical or physical entity that performs a function. The actual entity\
     described depends on the 
    context of the reference. At the lowest level, device may refer to a sin\
    gle hardware component, as 
    in a memory device. At a higher level, it may refer to a collection of h\
    ardware components that 
    perform a particular function, such as a Universal Serial Bus interface \
    device. At an even higher 
    level, device may refer to the function performed by an entity attached \
    to the Universal Serial Bus; 
    for example, a data/FAX modem device. Devices may be physical, electrica\
    l, addressable, and 
    logical.
     
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