This review first appeared in issue 357 of PC Pro.
On its website, Samsung lists this monitor as the S90PC ViewFinity 5K Smart Monitor, but it feels more like a smart TV on first âbootâ. It asks to be connected to your Wi-Fi network, and once youâve jumped through various hoops youâll find yourself in Samsungâs TV Plus section with a huge selection of live channels. Just to hammer home the point, your first interactions are via a remote control rather than an OSD.
The remote offers dedicated buttons for Disney Plus, Netflix and Prime Video. We watched the first few minutes of Top Gun: Maverick and the detail was so rich on the 5K panel that we picked up several details we didnât spot in the cinema. Samsung backs up the visuals with the best speakers here by some distance. Whisper it, but thereâs even bass on show.
You can also play games via Samsungâs Gaming Hub, with an option to sync your Amazon account via Luna. It supports Xbox Game Pass and Nvidiaâs GeForce Now services, too. Games look great, despite the S9âs modest 60Hz refresh rate.
But weâre getting this the wrong way round, for Samsung is promoting the ViewFinity S9 as a work first, play later monitor, so letâs head to the Workplace area of its Tizen OS interface. Here, you can wirelessly connect to a PC, a Samsung phone (using DeX) and even log in to your Microsoft 365 workspace.
The latter is aggravatingly slow, though, and thereâs also annoying lag on the wireless connections to your PC and phone, so youâll reach for the Thunderbolt cable where possible. And at this point, finally, it becomes a normal monitor. Albeit one with a 5K (5,120 x 2,880) resolution, which gives a quite stunning 218ppi density. Overkill, but photographers will love the detail, and it makes the 109ppi of a 1440p 27in screen feel distinctly average.
At this price we expected mini-LED technology, but IPS is in place as usual.
Itâs an 8-bit panel with FRC, giving 1.07 billion colors, but what will matter for professional users is that it comes pre-calibrated for sRGB and DCI-P3. Not Adobe RGB, though, which is a surprise as the ViewFinity S9 lists Pantone validation among its many features.
There are also two slots available in the OSD for hardware calibration via recent Samsung phones. Using the Smart Things app, you can opt for a simple 30-second calibration for basic colors and brightness, or complete a ten-minute âprofessionalâ calibration to either the sRGB or DCI-P3 color spaces. The result was little better than the pre-calibrated versions, but could be useful if the colors drift over the years.
Most of the time, though, youâll find the default âEcoâ mode does the job, which uses the panelâs native color profile and covers 99% of the DCI-P3 space. Weâre not sure âEcoâ is the correct term, however, as this is the most power-intensive 27in display here, consuming 42W at 200cd/m2 and 61W at its peak 629cd/m2. Films benefit from even higher peaks thanks to support for HDR.
The monitor itself looks stunning. Its thin bezels and stylish finish remind us of Appleâs Studio Display, and while we would have liked more tilt than 15° back and 2° forward, at least it includes 120mm of height adjustment. Only an ambient light sensor interrupts the clean lines of the front display, with the traditional OSD controls tucked next to a sprinkling of connectors at the rear: a miniDisplayPort, one USB-C input (complete with Thunderbolt 4 support), and three USB-C connectors for peripherals. The main USB-C port delivers 98W of power but the others a miserly 4.5W, which is surprising when you consider the gigantic power brick â think cigar case â that youâll want to hide under your desk.
Thereâs one final bonus here: a 4K webcam. It comes with a privacy cover, albeit one thatâs easy to lose, but for ultimate privacy simply disconnect it. The slimline unit attaches magnetically to the rear of the panel via pogo pins, so you can chuck it in a drawer when not in use. When itâs time for calls, its superb detail capture will surely impress.
Whether itâs great enough to justify the price is a different matter. If it included mini-LED technology we could understand the ÂŁ999 tag, but the S9 â while a lovely monitor â only makes sense for those with money to spare and the need for a 5K work screen during the day and an entertainment center at night.
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