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|  | | PC World - 28 Apr (PC World)At a glanceExpert`s Rating
Pros
Practical design with good ergonomic stand
Lots of USB connectivity, plus Ethernet
Refresh rate up to 100Hz
Cons
Image quality doesn’t impress
No HDR
No Adaptive Sync
Our Verdict
The Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C is a decent choice if you want an ultrawide with lots of connectivity, but the monitor’s image quality fails to impress.
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Ultrawide monitors are a great option for office productivity, and, at a glance, the Dell Pro 34 Plus looks ideal for the home office. It has a 34-inch IPS panel with good brightness and clarity, as well as extensive USB-C connectivity. However, the monitor’s pricing and overall image quality narrow its appeal.
Read on to learn more, then see our roundup of the best monitors for comparison.
Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C P3425WE specs and features
A look at the Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C’s spec sheet quickly reveals what the monitor is about: connectivity. The monitor has a USB-C port with up to 90 watts of Power Delivery. That connects to one USB-C and three USB-A downstream ports. Ethernet is supported, too.
Display size: 34-inch 21:9 aspect ratio
Native resolution: 3440×1440 (WQHD)
Panel type: IPS Technology
Refresh rate: 100Hz
Adaptive sync: None
HDR: No
Ports: 1x USB-C with up to 90W power delivery, 1x USB-C (15W downstream), 1x DisplayPort 1.4, 1x HDMI, 1x RJ45 Ethernet (1GbE), 1x USB-B upstream, 3x USB-A downstream
Additional features: KVM switch, Dell Display and Peripheral Manager support
Warranty: 3-year Advanced Exchange Service
Price: $749.99 MSRP
However, the monitor’s features are otherwise reserved. The monitor notably lacks the IPS Black technology found in Dell’s flagship widescreen monitors. It doesn’t have built-in speakers either, and has a limited range of image quality customization.
Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C design
The Dell Pro 34 Plus deviates a bit from the design of prior ultrawide monitors. Instead of a silver or white colorway, Dell has moved back towards a conservative, all-black look. It makes sense for the monitor’s intended buyers, which include both businesses and home office users, but it’s bland.
Strangely, the monitor stand is still silver. It looks like Dell stuck with an existing silver monitor stand because, uh, that’s what they had on hand. It’s not the end of the world, but it’s not great. Looks aside, the monitor’s material quality is good. The plastics feel firm and have a pleasing texture.
Matthew Smith / Foundry
It’s a curved monitor, as well, though only just. The curve is obvious when viewing the monitor from above or below, but not obvious when viewing the monitor straight-on. While I’d prefer a flat screen for an office monitor, the Dell’s curve is subtle enough that I didn’t mind.
The stand provides a better-than-average range of adjustments for height and swivel, with 150mm for the former and 60 degrees for the latter. The stand can’t rotate 90 degrees for use in portrait orientation, but that’s typical for an ultrawide monitor. It’s simply too wide to practically support it.
A 100x100mm VESA mount is also available for use with third-party monitor stands and arms. The panel (without stand) weighs less than 16 pounds, so high-quality monitor arms will easily support it.
Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C connectivity
As I’ve mentioned in past reviews, connectivity is often not just nice to have but, rather, the entire reason to buy a monitor. And the Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C has plenty of connectivity.
The star of the show is the USB-C port. It supports USB-C with data rates up to 5Gbps, DisplayPort, and up to 90 watts of USB Power Delivery. While the data rate isn’t impressive, the Dell Pro 34 Plus covers all the basics that should be expected from a modern USB-C monitor.
Additional video connectivity includes DisplayPort and HDMI. All video inputs can handle the monitor’s maximum resolution and refresh rate. DisplayPort-out is not available, though, which is a bit disappointing for a monitor in this category.
The USB-C input connects to one downstream USB-C port and three downstream USB-A ports. Some of these ports are found in a convenient pop-out on the monitor’s chin, which makes it easier to connect USB devices. A USB-B input is available, too, and can connect to the downstream USB ports in place of, or alongside, a USB-C device.
A gigabit Ethernet port is available, which means the Dell Pro 34 Plus can extend wired Ethernet to a connected device. That’s handy if you’re connecting to a modern laptop (which, most likely, lacks Ethernet) and are looking for a wired Ethernet connection.
The Dell Pro 34 Plus covers all the basics that should be expected from a modern USB-C monitor.
Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C menus and features
The Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C’s options are controlled with a joystick on the rear right flank. That’s typical for a monitor, though placing the joystick in this location on an ultrawide makes the control a little hard to reach.
You might not need it, however, because the Dell Pro 34 Plus is compatible with Dell’s Display and Peripheral Manager (DPPM). It’s a software utility that can control most monitor features and image quality adjustments. Most competitors (including Asus and BenQ) offer similar options, but Dell’s utility looks nice and works well. DPPM is compatible with Windows 10/11 and MacOS, but not Linux.
Matthew Smith / Foundry
Unfortunately, the Dell Pro 34 Plus doesn’t offer a great range of image quality adjustment. It has just a handful of image quality presets and does not provide gamma and color temperature presets that target specific values. While I understand the Dell Pro 34 Plus isn’t really meant for owners picky about image quality, I still feel that, at this price, more image quality adjustments should be expected.
The feature list is a bit light, too. The monitor has a KVM switch but it doesn’t have built-in speakers, a tripod mount, or an ambient light sensor. The lack of extra features feels stingy, given the MSRP. Those looking for more built-in functionality might consider the Dell Pro 34 Plus P3424WEB, a 34-inch ultrawide with camera, speakers, and similar USB-C connectivity, which is sold at an MSRP of $819.99.
Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C SDR image quality
The Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C is a 34-inch ultrawide monitor with a 21:9 aspect ratio, a display resolution of 3440×1440, and a conventional LCD-IPS panel.
The type of panel is important. Dell was the first company to sell monitors with a new type of IPS panel, called IPS Black, that has improved contrast, and IPS Black is found in many of its flagship monitors.
The Pro 34 Plus USB-C doesn’t have this new type of panel, however, which hampers its SDR image quality.
Matthew Smith / Foundry
We start with brightness, where the Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C provides a mid-pack maximum brightness of 327 nits. This level of brightness is greater than an OLED competitor, such as the MSI MPG 341C, and some IPS-LCD monitors, like the BenQ PD3420Q.
In general, the Dell Pro 34 Plus is bright enough for use in a home or business setting. However, it could be brighter, as some other monitors show.
Matthew Smith / Foundry
Next up is contrast, where the Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C provides a contrast ratio of 1220:1 at 50 percent of maximum brightness. That, once again, is a fine but not incredible result. The Dell Pro 34 Plus has a better contrast ratio than the BenQ PD3420Q, but it’s not as good as the bigger Dell Ultrasharp 4025QW, and obviously not in the same league as MSI’s MPG 341C, which has an OLED panel.
This is where the lack of an IPS Black panel comes back to bite the Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C. It simply lacks the contrast needed to provide an immersive image. It’s not terrible, but shoppers can find price-competitive monitors that are much better.
Matthew Smith / Foundry
Color gamut is a weakness of the Dell Pro 34 Plus. It achieved a color gamut that spanned 100 percent of sRGB, 83 percent of DCI-P3, and 78 percent of AdobeRGB. That’s not bad, but as the graph shows, it’s not competitive with similarly priced (or even less expensive) monitors sold in 2025.
Matthew Smith / Foundry
Color accuracy is good, as the monitor achieved an average color error below 2. In general, color errors should not be easy to notice, and colors will appear to be realistic (or, at least, true to their source).
However, the monitor saw slight variants in gamma and color temperature. I measured a color temperature of 6700K, which is a bit cooler and more sterile than the target of 6500K. I also measured a gamma curve of 2.3, which is a bit darker than the target of 2.2. These aren’t huge swings, but I did find the color temperature noticeable. Also, the monitor lacks built-in adjustments that make this easy to fix (though software calibration is still an option).
Sharpness is decent. The monitor’s 3440×1440 resolution works out to about 110 pixels per inch across the 34-inch, 21:9 aspect ratio display. That’s not bad. Also, IPS-LCD monitors do not have the sub-pixel quirks of OLED monitors, which means the Dell Pro 34 Plus looks sharper than 34-inch OLEDs such as the MSI MPG 341C. But 3440×1440 resolution isn’t all that impressive in 2025, with 4K and 5K monitors now readily available.
Overall, then, the Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C’s image quality is a bit of a bust. It’s okay. It does the job. And certainly, it’s fine for the general office productivity for which this monitor is intended. Still, there are many similarly priced monitors that offer better image quality at this price point.
Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C HDR image quality
The Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C does not support HDR.
That’s mostly fine for a monitor that targets office productivity. Office productivity apps don’t typically benefit from HDR, and most don’t support it.
However, OLED monitors (which are sold at this price) do offer HDR, and some are quite good at it. So, of course, they’re the better choice if HDR is important to you.
Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C motion performance
It shouldn’t come as a surprise that the Dell Pro 34 Plus isn’t meant for gaming. However, the monitor does provide a refresh rate of up to 100Hz, which is better than nothing. Besides increasing motion clarity in games, the increased refresh rate also improves the readability of text and images as they scroll across the screen.
Adaptive sync is not supported, though, and the monitor quotes an unimpressive gray-to-gray pixel response time of 5 to 8 milliseconds, depending on the mode. Motion blur remains obvious, and the monitor can’t sync with an input device for smooth frame pacing.
Should you buy the Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C?
The Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C P3425WE is a workmanlike monitor built for, well, work. It doesn’t go out of its way to provide extra features or superior image quality and instead narrows its focus to connectivity and practical features, like a highly adjustable stand.
I don’t begrudge Dell for that focus, but I do begrudge Dell for the price. Listed at an MSRP of $749.99, and currently sold for that price, the P3425WE becomes difficult to recommend. It’s even $70 more than the outgoing Dell P3424WE.
Part of me wonders if the jump in price is the result of ongoing tariff concerns. Or, perhaps, Dell is simply trying to squeeze more cash from enterprise and productivity-minded shoppers willing to pay a lot for a practical display.
Either way, the price narrows the Dell Pro 34 Plus USB-C’s appeal. It’s a good option for home office shoppers who want outstanding connectivity, including Ethernet and multiple downstream USB-A ports. If you’re more concerned about image quality and motion clarity, though, you should consider OLED alternatives with USB-C, like the MSI MPG 341CQPX. Read...Newslink ©2025 to PC World |  |
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|  | | PC World - 25 Apr (PC World)About two years after Sightful’s Spacetop first emerged as a sort of display-less virtual computer, Spacetop is ready for liftoff — this time as a subscription-based Windows app that runs on third-party hardware, including laptops with NPUs.
What’s Spacetop? Using a pair of AR glasses from XReal, Sightful’s Spacetop AR platform surrounds you with a gigantic 100-inch virtual screen so that you can work on a virtual “multi-monitor” setup virtually anywhere. The primary appeal is to help you work in a cramped environment like a plane or a hotel room, where the virtual workspace offers you some of the advantages of a home office.
In 2023, Sightful showed off the Spacetop, which was like a Chromebook without a display. Sightful now utilizes the xReal Air ultra 2 AR glasses in place of the previously tethered AR glasses. If you didn’t own multiple displays and a Thunderbolt dock, fine — the AR setup surrounded you with virtual displays.
Today’s Spacetop Bundle makes some changes, though the concept remains the same. Instead of AR glasses that were essentially tethered to the computing solution, Sightful uses the XReal Air Ultra 2 AR glasses instead. The most significant change involves the computer: you’ll need a laptop with an NPU of some sort (a Copilot+ PC isn’t necessary, but a basic NPU like a Core Ultra 100 series is) to power the Spacetop app itself. Yes, Spacetop is now a subscription-based application that runs on top of Windows, and it’s $200 per year.
The old Sightful Spacetop.Sightful
The Xreal Air Ultra 2 AR glasses output at 1080p per eye, at up to 120 Hz, with three dimming levels so that you can essentially block out extraneous light. Custom lenses are available: prescription single-lens inserts cost $50, while prescription progressive lenses cost $150. Unfortunately, you can’t wear glasses with the Spacetop/XReal headset.
This concept might sound a bit like Apple’s Vision Pro — but Spacetop’s AR glasses from Xreal weigh 83 grams, while Apple’s headset weighs up to 650 grams. That’s a neck cramp waiting to happen.
Yes, it’s a hefty price: the $899 Spacetop Bundle includes the AR glasses and a year’s worth ($200) of the Spacetop subscription. But you’ll need to either buy or own your own laptop on top of that, too. Sightful has been selling preorders of the bundle for $950, with a two-year Spacetop subscription offering for $1,050. (The subscriptions renew at $200 per year.)
Spacetop running on a Windows machine.Sightful
Work on the road and in the air
Spacetop aims to enable you to bring an office-like environment with you wherever you go, utilizing AR technology. We’ve heard this concept before: part of Meta’s ill-timed metaverse push around the Meta Quest Pro was a virtual workspace, where you were surrounded by virtual screens. It didn’t work, in part because the screens were simply too low-resolution to be useful, and the headset was too heavy. Likewise, Microsoft’s original HoloLens, which I loved, was paired with a Microsoft Mixed Reality headsets — which bombed — but included an ability to pin “screens” inside of a workspace that could remain persistent while you walked around.
Spacetop combines elements of both. It not only allows you to move and pin applications on what the company calls a 100-inch virtual screen but also set up a “travel mode” where the screens move with you as you move around. All of that happens via the NPU.
At CES 2025 in January, Sightful representatives informed me that the company shifted its strategy in 2024, following the introduction of the Copilot+ PC and the NPU in general. They also announced plans to launch the Spacetop later that year in May 2024. On the Spacetop’s laptop, the NPU simply offloads some of the functions that were previously assigned to the CPU and the GPU — it fits within the traditional role of the NPU, which is to perform some AI-specific tasks much more efficiently than elsewhere. The idea is that efficiency translates into longer battery life.
Early customers also didn’t like that the first Sightful iterations were essentially Android phones, with no ability to run Windows apps. It’s not entirely clear whether you’ll be able to run Chrome, or Edge, or a browser with plugins, let alone take a Zoom call while your face is obscured by a headset.
The question is, will such a specialty device take off? Spacetop’s launch seemed less certain a couple of years ago, essentially requiring a specialized device for plane use. But now it looks much more useful as just another Windows app combined with a laptop and AR glasses that you can store in your carry-on. Read...Newslink ©2025 to PC World |  |
|  | | PC World - 24 Apr (PC World)At a glanceExpert`s Rating
Pros
Excellent image quality in SDR and HDR
Attractive yet functional design
Thunderbolt 4 connectivity
Many image quality modes and options
Cons
Just one Thunderbolt 4-in and two video inputs
Limited downstream USB connectivity
More expensive than other 32-inch 4K QD-OLED monitors
Our Verdict
The Asus ProArt PA32UCDM delivers excellent OLED image quality and high refresh rates, though limited connectivity holds it back.
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There’s no shortage of 32-inch 4K QD-OLED monitors available right now, and all of them are excellent for movies, games, and general use. But what about creative professionals? Though any QD-OLED can do the job, many such displays lack the design and feature set professional shoppers prefer. The Asus ProArt PA32UCDM fills that gap.
Read on to learn more, then see our roundup of the best 4K monitors for comparison.
Asus ProArt PA32UCDM specs and features
The Asus ProArt PA32UCDM’s spec sheet looks great, if a bit boring. It’s a 32-inch 4K QD-OLED monitor with 3840×2160 resolution, a 10-bit QD-OLED panel, and a maximum refresh rate of 240Hz. It also supports Adaptive Sync and is VESA DisplayHDR 400 True Black certified. These specifications are more or less identical to other 32-inch 4K QD-OLED monitors, like the HP Omen Transcend 32 and MSI MPG 32URXW.
Display size: 32-inch 16:9 aspect ratio
Native resolution: 3840×2160
Panel type: 10-bit QD-OLED
Refresh rate: 240Hz
Adaptive sync: Yes, Adaptive Sync with VRR
HDR: VESA DisplayHDR 400 True Black Certified
Ports: 1x Thunderbolt 4-in port, 1x Thunderbolt 4-out (for Daisy Chain), 1x HDMI 2.1 port, 1x USB-C with up to 96 watts of Power Delivery, 1x USB-A 3.2 Gen 2
Additional features: Ambient light sensor
Audio: 2x 3-watt speakers
Warranty: 3-year warranty
Price: $1899.99 MSRP
The ProArt stands apart thanks to its connectivity, though not entirely in a good way.
It has a pair of Thunderbolt 4 ports, one for Thunderbolt 4-in and a second for Thunderbolt 4-out (to be used to daisy chain to a second monitor). This is rare for any monitor, and especially rare for OLED. The inclusion of Thunderbolt 4 hints at the monitor’s professional intent but, as I’ll discuss, also leads to the omission of ports many shoppers will expect.
Asus ProArt PA32UCDM design
The Asus ProArt PA32UCDM is part of the ProArt line-up, obviously, but it doesn’t look like the ProArt devices you’ve most likely laid eyes on before. It ditches the simple black and charcoal look of more affordable ProArt monitors for an elegant, stylish silver look.
And it’s not just a look. The ProArt makes extensive use of metal across both the display panel and the stand. This helps the monitor offer a sleek profile while delivering a robust feel that very few competitors can match. Of all that I’ve tested recently, Samsung’s Odyssey OLED G8 is the only one that’s equally attractive.
Matthew Smith / Foundry
Looks aside, the monitor’s design is functional. The stand ergonomically adjusts for height, tilt, swivel, and pivot. It also has an extremely narrow base, which minimizes the monitor’s footprint on a desk. As with most monitors, a 100mm x 100mm VESA mount is available for connecting the ProArt to third-party monitor arms and stands.
The PA32UCDM monitor offers a sleek profile while delivering a robust feel that very few competitors can match.
Asus ProArt PA32UCDM connectivity
The Asus ProArt PA32UCDM leans heavily on Thunderbolt 4 and USB-C. Perhaps too heavily.
First, about those Thunderbolt ports. There’s two, but they’re not equal. One is the primary Thunderbolt port with support for USB-C, DisplayPort, and Power Delivery. The second is a Thunderbolt-out port intended for daisy-chain connections to a second monitor. That means you can plug a laptop into the ProArt over Thunderbolt, then plug a second monitor into the ProArt.
However, the ProArt otherwise doesn’t offer much opportunity to tap into Thunderbolt 4’s bandwidth. It has just two downstream USB ports (one USB-C and one USB-A) and lacks an Ethernet jack or audio-out connection. Though it can technically function as a Thunderbolt hub, the ProArt’s limited range of downstream connectivity is a big downside.
Thunderbolt 4 aside, the monitor has just one additional display input: HDMI 2.1. Yes, that means DisplayPort is absent, and just two video inputs are available. I find that decision weird, as DisplayPort is the most universal video output for desktop video cards.
In summary, connectivity is the ProArt’s most significant weakness, and one that I find surprising. I expect shoppers will compare the ProArt to other high-end 32-inch 4K displays, such as the Dell UltraSharp U3225QE and BenQ PD3226G. The Asus has far fewer ports than either. Even the HP Omen Transcend 32 has superior connectivity, and it’s hundreds of dollars less expensive.
Asus ProArt PA32UCDM menus and features
A joystick control tucked just behind the Asus ProArt PA32UCDM’s bottom bezel provides quick, responsive access to the on-screen controls. I also like the menu system. It’s easy to navigate and has a larger font size than many competitors.
Alternatively, most monitor features can be changed with Asus’ DisplayWidget app, available for Windows 11/10 and MacOS. It’s no work of art, but it goes a bit beyond the bare necessities. For example, DisplayWidget automatically changes the look of the UI to match the branding of the Asus monitor you own.Either way, you’re likely to spend a bit more time in the menu than with other monitors, because the ProArt has a truckload of features. We’re talking 15 SDR presets (including sRGB, DCI-P3, AdobeRGB, BT.2020, DICOM, and Rec.709) plus five HDR modes (including Dolby Vision). You’ll also find color temperature and gamma adjustments that target precise values and six-axis color calibration. Asus has its own calibration software to help users fine-tune the monitor.
Matthew Smith / Foundry
Other monitor features include picture-by-picture and picture-in-picture modes, an on-screen ruler to help measure the size of objects on the screen, and a uniform brightness mode that limits the overall brightness of the display to achieve better luminance uniformity.
The monitor has an ambient light sensor that serves two functions. First, it can sync the brightness and color temperature of the display to fit your environment, which helps the monitor provide a consistent image quality experience. Second, it can dim the display when you move away from it to save power and reduce the likelihood of OLED burn-in. I think ambient light sensors are an underrated feature that improve day-to-day ease of use, so I’m glad to see one here.
Speakers are included, too, though they don’t impress. The speakers provide enough volume to fill a small office with tunes, but the audio is thin and can become distorted when it attempts to deliver bass.
Asus ProArt PA32UCDM SDR image quality
The Asus ProArt PA32UCDM is all about image quality. Yes, every monitor is better if it looks nice, but an expensive monitor like the ProArt must look amazing. If it doesn’t, then it doesn’t serve its purpose (or justify its price).
Matthew Smith / Foundry
We start off with brightness, where the ProArt reached an excellent peak SDR brightness of 294 nits. That’s not as high as IPS-LCD monitors, which can exceed 400 nits, but it’s very bright for SDR on an OLED monitor. It’s also far more than adequate for its intended purpose.
A display like the ProArt is best used in a room with light control, in which case the brightness is relevant. But if you do like to work with your shades drawn back, well, the ProArt will look more vivid than most 32-inch QD-OLED displays.
Note, though, that the ProArt has a glossy finish. You should expect to see reflections when viewing dark images in a brightly lit room.
Matthew Smith / Foundry
OLED panels can reach a minimum luminance of zero nits and can do so per-pixel. That translates to an incredible sense of depth and immersion, as well as deep and inky black levels in darker scenes. Moody movies and games, like Resident Evil 2 Remake or The Batman, look superb on an OLED display like the ProArt.
All OLED displays do well here, so the ProArt has no advantage (or disadvantage) against QD-OLED alternatives. However, as the graph shows, it comes out way ahead of IPS-LCD displays like the Dell Ultrasharp U3225QE.
Matthew Smith / Foundry
Color gamut testing looks at the range of color a monitor can display. The ProArt does well here, with coverage of 100 percent of sRGB, 97 percent of DCI-P3, and 94 percent of AdobeRGB.
This is a very broad color gamut that’s well suited to professional creative work, but it’s not remarkable for a monitor in this category. That feels almost bizarre to say, because a color gamut this wide was hard to come by just five years ago. But, as the graph shows, most high-end monitors sold in 2025 offer a very wide color gamut.
Matthew Smith / Foundry
The wide color gamut is supported by excellent color accuracy. Most OLEDs do rather well here, but the ProArt is at the top of its class. It provides an incredibly realistic, lifelike image on par with the best monitor sold today.
Image accuracy is further supported by the ProArt’s gamma curve of 2.2. That’s right on target, and it means content viewed on the monitor looks just as bright as it should, preserving good detail in both bright highlights and shadows. The color temperature came in at 6400K, just a hair south of the target of 6500K. I found the variance hard to discern.
Sharpness is good, as well, thanks to the monitor’s native resolution of 3840×2160. That works out to be about 143 pixels per inch (ppi) across the 31.5-inch panel. By comparison, a typical 27-inch 4K monitor packs 163 pixels per inch, while a 27-inch 1080p monitor has just 81 pixels per inch.
Overall, the Asus ProArt PA32UCDM’s SDR image quality doesn’t disappoint. Although it’s like other QD-OLED monitors, it does have several small advantages when compared to other, less expensive displays. The ProArt’s out-of-box color is more accurate than usual, its gamma and color temperature results are close to ideal, and it provides a broad range of image quality adjustments for further calibration.
These advantages won’t matter much when watching YouTube or playing PC games, but they make the ProArt a superior pick for those who want an OLED display for creative work like digital art, photography, and video editing.
Asus ProArt PA32UCDM HDR image quality
The Asus ProArt PA32UCDM is VESA DisplayHDR 400 True Black certified, which is the level of certification most QD-OLED monitors achieve. However, it can become rather bright when small portions of the display are lit.
Matthew Smith / Foundry
I measured a maximum sustained brightness of 896 nits in a 10 percent window, meaning 10 percent of the display’s area was lit. That’s a strong result, though, as the graph shows, it’s typical for the latest QD-OLED displays.
In the real world, I was impressed by the ProArt HDR. It delivered bold, yet accurate color and provided eye-searing HDR highlights. OLED used to be quite noticeably behind Mini-LED in HDR, but the latest OLEDs have closed that gap (and the lack of good Mini-LED monitors doesn’t help that technology’s case).
The ProArt also provides an unusually wide range of HDR presets, which include presets for HDR BT.2020 and HDR Dolby Vision, among others. These also provide several clipping modes which change how luminance is handled in HDR. Overall, the ProArt’s range of HDR adjustment is much wider than typical, and those who plan to work professionally with HDR content may need these modes to check the accuracy and consistency of HDR video and images.
Asus ProArt PA32UCDM motion performance
Although obviously not targeted at gamers, the Asus ProArt PA32UCDM can hit a refresh rate of up to 240Hz. It also has Adaptive Sync support. That means it should work with AMD FreeSync and Nvidia G-Sync, and I was able to use FreeSync with the monitor connected to my AMD Radeon 7800 XT video card. However, this is not official, so it’s possible (though not very likely) you’ll run into edge cases where FreeSync or G-Sync don’t work as expected.
Of course, a 240Hz refresh rate with Adaptive Sync helps the monitor provide great motion clarity, and the ProArt looks as crisp in motion as QD-OLED alternatives marketed towards gamers. That’s good news if you want one monitor that’s great for work and play.
The improved refresh rate is also relevant for work. Fast-moving text and images remain legible, so it’s possible to read text when scrolling through a document or quickly identify an image while rapidly moving through previews or thumbnails. This benefit isn’t often discussed, but it’s a noticeable advantage over a 60Hz or even 120Hz competitor, like the Dell Ultrasharp U3225QE.
It has a fan
This is a minor point, but one worth knowing before you buy. The Asus ProArt PA32UCDM has a fan, and you will hear it if you’re using the monitor in a quiet room. It’s not very loud, and the fan noise wasn’t grating, but it was noticeable.
Should you buy the Asus ProArt PA32UCDM?
The Asus ProArt PA32UCDM is a great choice if you want a QD-OLED monitor for creative professional work. The PA32UCDM provides superb image quality, attractive yet functional design, and a wide range of image quality options.
Unfortunately, the monitor could benefit from more connectivity (including more USB-A and a DisplayPort input). Competitors like the Dell UltraSharp U3225QE and BenQ PD3226G don’t match the PA32UCDM’s image quality, but they offer numerous extra ports. The ProArt’s lack of ports means some owners will still need a Thunderbolt or USB-C hub, which is a tall order, because the ProArt is already more expensive than its peers.
That does limit the ProArt’s appeal. Unlike the Dell U3225QE, which is great for a broad range of white-collar office work and any home office setup, the ProArt is laser-focused on creative professionals, and especially those who want to work in HDR. If that’s you, though, the ProArt is a go-to pick. Read...Newslink ©2025 to PC World |  |
|  | | PC World - 24 Apr (PC World)Adobe’s Firefly generative AI service is evolving into becoming more of a front-end service for generative AI in general, as Adobe has made its text-to-video capabilities generally available as well as the option to use even non-Adobe AI models.
Adobe announced its new additions as part of its Adobe Max conference in London, also using Firefly as inspiration for some changes to its Creative Cloud applications as well.
The world first saw Adobe Firefly in 2023, when the service debuted in beta as an image and font generator. Firefly went live that September based upon a credit plan, allocated by how much you already paid Adobe for apps like Photoshop or a full-fledged Creative Cloud subscription. Adobe then turned to text-to-video earlier this year, with the available payment plans offering just a few brief snippets of video in exchange for a monthly fee. It’s this video service which has now launched via Firefly for the web, Adobe said.
Adobe has stepped lightly through the ideological minefield that is AI art; some creators who use Adobe’s tools have spoken out quite loudly against the use of machine-generated art, but Adobe’s images come with a disclaimer that they were in fact produced by AI. Today, Adobe is launching a beta of a Content Authenticity app that allows creators to verify their identity, and to attach whatever information they would like to their profile and social media accounts. More importantly, they can include a tag that indicates that they don’t want generative AI to train on their work.
Adobe Firefly’s drop-down menu allows users to select different generative AI models.Adobe
Adobe said that Firefly now offers two new models, a hyper-realistic Firefly Image Model 4, and a detailed Firefly Image Model 4 Ultra. But users can also select non-Adobe models like GPT image generation and Google’s Imagen 3, and Veo 2 video models. Runway, Pika, Luma, Ideogram, and Fal.ai are coming soon, Adobe added.
Adobe is also adding “boards” to Firefly, where users can drop in a number of visual ideas and use them as a source for their next creation. In a demonstration, an Adobe executive showed how two images on a board could be “mashed up” — Firefly sampled two images, then used AI to combine them.
Users can mash up two different images in the new Firefly Boards, creating a hybrid prompt to generate something new.Adobe
In Photoshop, Adobe is adding Composition Reference, a tool we’ve seen elsewhere; the tool uses how the objects in one scene are arranged as a reference guide for a second scene. Photoshop is also adding tools to Select Details like hair or facial features, and a new color adjustment tool, as well. Lightroom is adding a new Select Landscape tool, too.
The Generative Extend features in Premiere Pro are also being rolled out, too. Generative Extend is like a Photoshop’s generative features that allow the user to “extend” the scene; in video, Premiere will add additional small AI-generated clips to prolong a shot. Caption Translation will provide captions in up to 27 languages, while a Media Intelligence tool provides better search capabilities in existing footage.
Some improvements coming to Photoshop. Read...Newslink ©2025 to PC World |  |
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