Cornerstone c1035 Monitor Review
by Kristopher Kubicki on July 2, 2002 1:34 AM EST- Posted in
- Displays
Features
Even though the Cornerstone puts out a great number of constructional enhancements, it offers just a standard range of user controls. The oversimplified 4 button control panel lets you access 28 different options. The menu seemed slightly clumsy; it was a little counter intuitive. While there was nothing missed in these controls, we did not find any spectacular options that caught our eye either. The menu was basically left alone except when switching input devices.
The menu was a little counter intuitive, but still simple to navigate and control.
Except when benchmarking the monitor, we usually increased the v-size and h-size just a little bit.
The reason we came into the menu the most? To switch the inputs of course.
The buttons are straight forward. They are (from left to right) menu, select, up and down. The power button functions as the fifth button on the monitor.
One thing that caught our eye was the incredible amount of geometry options. 8 of 28 functions were specific to just the geometry of the image. Another 5 were dedicated to the orientation of the image. Rotate was by far the most interesting option. I suppose if your desk had a 15 degree slope this could be useful.
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