AOC has introduced a new 27” display that features Qi wireless charging for mobile phones in the base. The monitor uses a PLS panel and has standard characteristics for a mainstream device aimed at office environments. Despite this, the P2779VC is one of the first 27” displays with Qi wireless charging and it will make an appealing option for those who need both large screen and Qi, especially given its affordable price.

The AOC P2779VC is a 27” IPS monitor with a 1920×1080 resolution, 300 nits brightness, 178°/178° viewing angles, and a 60 Hz refresh rate (static contrast ratio is unknown). The display is listed as reproducing 16.77 million colors, enough for office workloads, and has a response time of 5 ms gray-to-gray, enough for videos and gaming. AOC does not confirm adherence to any particular color space in its spec sheet.

When it comes to connectivity, the AOC P2779VC is a fairly basic monitor with one D-Sub and two HDMI 1.3 inputs. Unlike some other mainstream displays, this one does not have built-in speakers or a USB hub which may be an advantage for tightly-packed corporate offices that have to deal with noise (minus speakers) and mind corporate security (minus USB). 

AOC P2779VC
  P2779VC
Panel 27" PLS
Native Resolution 1920 × 1080
Maximum Refresh Rate 60 Hz
Response Time 5 ms (gray-to-gray)
Brightness 300 cd/m²
Contrast 20,000,000:1 dynamic contrast ratio
Viewing Angles 178°/178° horizontal/vertical
Pixel Pitch 0.311 × 0.311 mm
Inputs 1 × HDMI 1.3
1 × D-Sub
Wireless charging Qi wireless charging base
Power Consumption Standby < 0.5 W
Maximum 23.5 W

Meanwhile, the key selling feature of the P2779VC is its base that features a Qi wireless charging pad in the base. As far as we could find, commercially, only Samsung has released two SE370 displays that support Qi and feature 23.6” and 27” PLS panels. As a result AOC’s monitor is not going to have too many rivals right now. Keep in mind that at present there are tens of smartphones and tablets with integrated Qi wireless charging technology (including those from ASUS, Samsung, Google, HP, Microsoft and other) and there are accessories that enable the tech on devices without integrated support (e.g., on Apple iPhone 6S).

The AOC P2779VC comes with a black or gold base and with the company’s standard three-year warranty. The price of the display is $199.99, which is a bit lower when compared to the price of the Samsung SE370 270 that is available for $213.80.

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Source of Images: Amazon.

Source: AOC

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  • DanNeely - Monday, December 5, 2016 - link

    neither would I. OTOH I've known coworkers who scored 24" 1920x1200 monitors (back when they were a premium option) and then ran them at 1280x1024 to make the text bigger (WinXP text scaling was a dumpster fire squared and cubed). The lower DPI wouldn't be a problem for them especially since win10 still has application specific DPI scaling problems even with high profile applications (*cough*Chrome tooltips*cough*).
  • jsntech - Monday, December 5, 2016 - link

    Read my mind. 82 PPI in 2016 at any price is tragic.
  • Dizoja86 - Monday, December 5, 2016 - link

    Agreed. 1080p is fine for a solid quality 27" monitor for video/gaming purposes, but higher resolution will almost always be preferred for the office. 90% of home users are likely gaming on cards below a 1070, and there are a lot of games that aren't going to run at 1440p or above with higher settings. VSR and DSR can help give some of the benefits of higher resolution rendering as well when there's graphics power to spare.
  • doggface - Tuesday, December 6, 2016 - link

    I know many people at my work (multi$Bln corporate) that would give their right nut for one of these. Then again they are sitting on dual 19" 1280x1024 monitors from 10 yrs ago.

    Most of them would change the scaling to 150% in win7 though..

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