Samsung SyncMaster S23A350H
Manufacturer: Samsung Part number: LS23A350HS/ZA
- More product information:
- Editors' review
- User reviews
- Specifications
- Manufacturer info
- Bottom Line:
- While the Samsung SyncMaster S23A350H can't match the Samsung PX2370 in raw performance, it bests the S23A550H in both performance and price.
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Where to buy
| store | customer rating | inventory | tax & shipping | price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ![]() | In stock Get free shipping on orders over $25! | Enter zip code to get total price: Price +Tax +Shipping =Total price | as of 05/23/2013 |
| Memory4Less.com | Not yet rated | In stock | as of 05/22/2013 Refurbished |
CNET editors' review
Samsung SyncMaster S23A350H price range: $139.99 - $262.61
- Reviewed by: Eric Franklin
- Reviewed on: 09/07/2011
The good: The Samsung SyncMaster S23A350H's low price, robust OSD, easily accessible connections, and great performance make it a general-purpose monitor worth buying.
The bad: Unlike most other recent Samsung monitors, the S23A450H is pretty plain-looking. It's also missing some eco-friendly options found on other Samsungs, and the lack of a DVI connection can be an annoyance.
The bottom line: While the Samsung SyncMaster S23A350H can't match the Samsung PX2370 in raw performance, it bests the S23A550H in both performance and price.
User reviews
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Samsung is going downhill
by Spuddy0108 on September 7, 2011
Pros: 16/9
Low power consumptionCons: Light bleeding
No tilt
dodgy OSD buttons
No DVISummary: I thought i'd upgrade my monitor from a Samsung Syncmaster 22" 16/10, to this 23" 16/9 monitor. Infact, i downgraded my monitor with this product. First of ...
Summary: I thought i'd upgrade my monitor from a Samsung Syncmaster 22" 16/10, to this 23" 16/9 monitor. Infact, i downgraded my monitor with this product. First of all there is no way to tilt the monitor even though it says on their website that it supports tilt, which it does not. The monitor is tilted a few degrees by default which is another thing i don't like because i prefer it to be flat but i can't change it.
Secondly, the light bleeding from the bottom of the screen is just terrible. I tried to adjust it as much as possible by fiddling with the brightness, contrast and gamma but there is no way to get it right. Either light bleeds from the bottom or the top is too dark. For a LED monitor, this is unacceptable.
The touch buttons on the monitor are a pain to use. They often dont work. I know one thing for sure, my next monitor will not be from Samsung.2 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Disappointing Product; wouldn't recommend at all.
by Thundercracker35 on May 12, 2011
Pros: Widescreen, 1920x1080 resolution, colour adjustment options, low power consumption, good price, pixel dimension and spacing.
Cons: Blacks not represented well (not very dark compared with other LCDs), bad backlighting (lots of bright spots and inconsistency), refresh rate not adequate (there is noticeble flickering and it is a strain on your eyes), obtrusive frame (the frame comes ou
Summary: I had high hopes for this monitor. Samsung has many many LED LCDs and it was hard to choose but I knew I wanted Samsung. So I went for their ...
Summary: I had high hopes for this monitor. Samsung has many many LED LCDs and it was hard to choose but I knew I wanted Samsung. So I went for their latest release, unfortunately (for me) there were no reviews on the product. At my home my family owns 2 Samsung widescreen TVs (one is an LED TV) and a Samsung refrigerator and we were happy with those products. Also a few of my friends have Samusng LCD monitors and they were very happy with their products. I noticed, comparing our LCD TVs, that the LED backlit one had a good representation of colour, so for many reasons I went with the S23A350H. Unfortunately, I felt I had to write this review to warn people of this product because I am very disappointed. FIrst we got it home and my brother and I set it up and watched some NBA (which had moments of HD). The monitor seemed to produce colour well though I noticed that the colour temperature needed adjustment (it was slightly red). This was a long day coming for me since i've owned an ACER FP563 15" 4:3 LCD monitor for 8 years or more and I was looking forward to being able to study better and to better use my graphics card in gaming.
Upon some further review I would like to comment positively on the overall contrast of the monitor. The contrast is actually quite good. While viewing white (or bright colours) next to black, the black looks very deep and dark. This is indicitive of a good contrast and vibrant colours. Black on its own, though, seems lacking (but you rarely want to look at an all black screen, except that in dark screens you may want a darker black). However, I forgot to mention another effect I noticed that is related to the contrast ratio. Some colours, like purple, seem garish and overpowering. Its like someone took a highlighter pen and wrote on the screen. This seems distracting to me, personally. Maybe the monitor can be adjusted to fix this (green and red are already turned down maybe I should turn blue down as well). The high contrast may be how they offset the sub-par baseline black to get a good image, but at the same time this has caused the colour to become overbearingly bright.
As time passed (about a week) I came to notice some crucial shortcomings of the S23A350H Samsung LED monitor. FIrstly the frame of the screen comes out at 90deg from the screen and sticks out around 1/3 of an inch (8mm). THERE IS NO BEVEL OR TAPER. I noticed this when standing and working with the screen (while working on my project). I noticed I had to bob my head down to see the window buttons (minimise-maximise-close). At the time I felt that this was okay, since I made sure (from the samsung website) that the monitor was able to tilt. To my surprise (horror) it didn't budge at all i.e. no tilt. Well, maybe they didn't make it tilt because of this so called "magic angle" and the wide viewing angles that were claimed. Magic angle is completely useless. By the time you press all the aweful touch buttons to get get it to magic angle you could have roatated the monitor on the stand or tilted it (IF IT HAD TILT). Are they assuming we have absolutely no space on our desk? Are they assuming we are going to mount it on the wall and every time we move to one side of the room we are going to walk up the monitor and press a few buttons? Even then, the frame sticks out so much that at those angles you miss part of the screen. For those that don't know what the magic angle does, I found out first hand. In the ideal case it adjusts the colours so they are correct from the desired viewing angle, these include, lean back mode, standing mode, side mode and group view. In reality it doesn't do this very well and it also changes your colour temperature setting (which i'm sensitive to). Comparing images front-on with no magic angle and images with magic angle at the desired vieweing angle, there is a noticible difference between the images. The magic angle doesn't correct the colour properly. I feel like i've downgraded my monitor since my 8 year old ACER LCD had built in tilt. I wouldn't have bought the Samsung if I knew it didn't tilt but it claimed to have tilt in the specifications. To round off discussion with viewing angle, I was actually expecting a lot more. Sitting in the sweet spot from a good distance away (the screen is 2.4-2.5 feet from my eyes) and displaying a uniform colour on the screen, if I move slightly off center the colour around the side of the monitor changes. The same can be said vertically. It doesn't perform that bad actually, considering. It seems apparant to me that most TN LCDs can't have their viewing angle improved at all, they just market wide viewing angles on new LCDs for some reason (160deg/170deg if I remember correctly).
Now lets get on to the black tone. It took me a while to appreciate how bad the black tone was. At University I was playing around with the LG 23" flatron monitors and noticed how good the black tone was on those monitors and how consistent it was across the whole screen (I displayed a black jpeg in full screen). I came to realise that my percieved imperfections on my monitor were not tricks my eyes were playing on me. The LG monitor wasn't perfect but you can really notice the light areas around the edges with the samsung. The worst part is the bottom edge where the white light bleeds an inch and a half up the the screen. The left side and the top of the screen seem don't seem to be that bad. While testing the black on my screen another problem with the monitor became apparant. In the lighter areas (of the full screen black image) I could see the pixels refreshing very clearly. Since getting the monitor I experienced a lot of eye strain. I attributed that to being tired and also that I might have to adjust to the screen (its mammoth compared to my 15" 4:3). But I have used 23" widescreens at University and never had any eyestrain. The refresh rate of the screen (quoted as 60Hz) is definately not adequate. I don't think it acheives 60Hz. I don't know if this is related to the response time. Adjusting the response time with the menu seems to have some sort of effect. You can adjust the response time of the monitor using the menu by the way and I don't really see the point of this feature unless faster response times wear out the panel. Quite laughable to be honest. Also I haven't noticed any difference in the display of moving images over my old ACER LCD which had a response tme of 36ms. Is the monitors 2ms response time bogus? I don't know. Since realising that the pixels flickered on the Samsung monitor I decided to hook up my 8+ years old ACER LCD 15" monitor and see if it had any flicker if I looked closely. I didn't notice any flickr on my 8 year old minitor. It has a lower pixel density so the pixels are more noticeable and I made sure it was set on 60Hz but only a very slight flicker was observed. It was very difficult to observe. My old monitor went up to 75Hz but the Samsung only offers 60Hz. In doing the test for flicker with the black image on my screen, I was able to compare the black of my old monitor to the new one (since the old monitor had my all black display and the Samsung was displaying a black screen saver saying check input). Again I was shocked to see that my 8 year old ACER monitor represented black much bettter than my new monitor. I'd post pictures if I could, it's quite apparant.
This is not a big deal for me, but the touch sensitive buttons (there are no actual buttons it senses your finger) are very inconsistent. The autoset button, especially, stops working for periods while you are trying to navigate the menus. It stays stuck so long that the menu disappears and you have to start again (you can click up and down while wiating so the menu doesn't disappear). You keep pressing over the button and nothing happens. You get in cases where you don't trust the buttons and you press them more than was needed and end up in all kinds of trouble.
To conclude, I don't know who this monitor is targetted towards. People are looking for quality and functionality. You want a monitor that displays picture well and being a LCD you want to be able to adjust the monitor quickly and easily when moving around your workspace to enjoy the best viewing angle. The Samsung monitor is sub-par in most areas and is bested by my 8 year old ACER 15" FP563, another of which i've seen sitting in the University laboratory reserved for the (very very ocassional) use of observing the clocking and output of digital logic circuits. I would not recommend this monitor to anyone. There must be worse monitors but why pay for junk. The locking adapter seems quite funny now when you think about it.
Updated on May 12, 20111 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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The quality of the image is horrible
by PuppyPR on February 27, 2013
Pros: None .
Cons: Light bleeding from the bottom of the screen.
Blurry image at max resolution.
Feels cheap (plastic)Summary: The monitor tilts, but Samsung failed to provide any instructions specifying it does. The quality of the image is horrible. Using it at it max resolution for Word and Excel, ...
Summary: The monitor tilts, but Samsung failed to provide any instructions specifying it does. The quality of the image is horrible. Using it at it max resolution for Word and Excel, the letters and else were just blurry, not sharp as others monitors here at work. After losing more than 1 hour tweaking and adjusting the settings I gave up. I just used the monitor for one day and returned it after doing research and reading the customer reviews at various sites. It has a huge problem with light bleeding from the bottom of the screen.
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Bang for the buck
by unidentical on July 20, 2011
Pros: full HD, good looking screen, great response time, very stable stand
Cons: Touch controls are a bit fussy
Summary: Pay no attention to the negative reviews, these people who are giving poor reviews for not having features it's not advertised as having.
If you want a perfect monitor ...Summary: Pay no attention to the negative reviews, these people who are giving poor reviews for not having features it's not advertised as having.
If you want a perfect monitor with all the features in the world then be prepared to spend at least twice as much.
This monitor is good value, and does everything that it's advertised as being able to do. -
Poor, nonadjustable stand design; unreliable hardware.
by Dean_E on July 9, 2011
Pros: 1. Bright. 2. Self-adjusting, non-distorting display. 3. Costco gave full refund when hardware failed.
Cons: 1. Unreliable hardware failed after 19 days and stopped recognizing VGA signal. 2. Absolutely no height adjustment. User must stack on phone books to raise height to correct viewing level.
Summary: Would not buy another new Samsung monitor. There is a good reason for all the refurbished Samsung S23A350H model monitors on sale.
Summary: Would not buy another new Samsung monitor. There is a good reason for all the refurbished Samsung S23A350H model monitors on sale.
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this is just good site to comment. this is just good
by deepakr83 on October 10, 2011
Pros: this is just good site to comment
Cons: this is just good site to comment
0 out of 3 users found this user opinion helpful.
Specifications
- Manufacturer: Samsung
- Part number: LS23A350HS/ZA
- Description: Take your viewing pleasure to amazing levels of color, brilliance and picture quality with Mega Dynamic Contrast Ratio technology. Samsung's SA350 monitor delivers images so real-to-life that it will transform your whole viewing experience. Packed with breathtaking contrast ratio, the SA350 monitor ensures that blacks are at their absolute darkest and colors are at their brightest. You will immediately notice the crystal clear picture and its unbelievable intensity. How do you like to watch movies? Do you like lying down on the couch? Sitting in your favorite chair? Cooking or exercising? Whether you're standing, sitting or lying down, Samsung's Magic Angle makes sure that the movie always takes center stage and that you're always comfortable. This means, thanks to the 5-mode angle management, that whatever angle you watch your Samsung monitor, you will enjoy a full visual experience with amazing picture clarity. So, start seeing your favorite movies and other multimedia in total comfort and without limitations thanks to Magic Angle. Save energy easily with Eco saving feature which adjusts the brightness of your Samsung monitor based on how much energy you want to save. And with the choice of three energy saving modes, you can really tailor your monitor use to meet your own personal needs.
General
- Packaged Quantity 1
- Display Type TFT active matrix
- Diagonal Size 23 in
- Aspect Ratio Widescreen - 16:9
- Native Resolution 1080p 1920 x 1080
- Brightness 250 cd/m2
- Color Support 16.7 million colors
- Response Time 2 ms
- Horizontal Viewing Angle 170
- Vertical Viewing Angle 160
- Backlight Technology LED backlight
- Features HDCP,
MagicAngle,
MagicTune,
MagicColor,
Power off timer,
MagicBright 3 - Color Rose black
- Dimensions (WxDxH) 21.9 in x 9.4 in x 16.8 in - With stand
- Weight 6.8 lbs
Audio
- Type None
Input
- Type None
Connectivity
- Interfaces VGA,
HDMI
Mechanical
- Display Position Adjustments Tilt
Miscellaneous
- Microsoft Certifications Compatible with Windows 7
Power
- Power Supply External
- Power Consumption Operational 29 Watt
- Power Consumption Stand by / Sleep 0.3 Watt
Sustainability
- CNET Power Saver Yes
- CNET Labs: Operational power consumption 26.3 Watt
- CNET Labs: Calibrated power consumption 22.6 Watt
- CNET Labs: Max brightness power consumption calibrated 26.3 Watt
- CNET Labs: Min brightness power consumption 9.9 Watt
- CNET Labs: Power consumption Stand by / Sleep 0.38 Watt
- CNET Labs: Estimated Annual Energy Cost 7.13 US Dollars
- ENERGY STAR Qualified Yes
- EPEAT Compliant EPEAT Gold
Manufacturer info
- Manufacturer profile
- Browse Samsung products on Shopper.com
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- Manufacturer:Samsung
- Address:
105 Challenger Road, Ridgefield Park, NJ 07660 - Phone: 1-800-726-7864
- Fax: 1-973-601-6001


