The SyncMaster 206BW's thin black bezel and curved edges are attractively sleek.
A half-inch line of silver at the bottom of the display provides a subtle accent and houses the on-screen display (OSD) buttons, which have etched function labels that are easy to read. The base swivels widely and the panel tilts, although there's no height adjustment. The SyncMaster 206BW has a DVI and VGA port in the back but doesn't offer other connectors, such as S-video or HDMI, that multimedia-focused monitors do.
The 206BW achieved an overall score of Very Good when tested for our February 2008 feature "The Wide World of Monitors," tying with its 20-inch wide-screen rival, HP's w2007. Judges awarded it high scores for its punchy graphics colors and piercingly sharp text. Flicker-free and uniformly bright, the display should bring a little pleasure to the work of looking at long Word and Excel documents. It did get mixed results in a grayscale tests, doing well with discernible light shades, but not so with darker ones. Its consistency on most other tests, however, was hard to beat.
Like many Samsung monitors, this model also includes the company's MagicBright presets for text, Internet, game, sport, and movies. Samsung's MagicColor, accessible only from the OSD menu, actually adjusts the saturation to make colors more vivid. A 'Demo' option compares the before and after settings on the screen. 'Full' indicates full use of saturation adjustments, while 'Intelligent' makes selective adjustments.
MagicTune software replaces the functions of the monitor's built-in display adjustments. I was able to download it from the Samsung Web site. It worked smoothly, and its interface is easy enough to be a good replacement for the OSD. Additionally, it offers basic calibration with images and test patterns.
In the movie
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Roy Santos