Nov 19, 2010 09:39 GMT  ·  By

A certain Japanese company called Hanwha decided it was time to provide the market with a pair of liquid crystal displays, so it brought forth a 7-inch resistive touchscreen and a 10.1-inch ultra-portable monitor.

The 7-inch so-called multi-use, ultra-portable monitor goes by the name of HM-TLB7 and is intended to be used as an alternate screen for video cameras, among other things.

Among its more unique assets is the removable sunshade and the built-in battery, which ensure visibility and continued functionality, respectively,

It has a resolution of 800 x 480 pixels (WVGA) and a brightness of 450 cd/m2, as well as a response time of 30ms and a contrast ratio of 500:1.

What's more, it measures 128 × 188 × 33 mm (weighs 560 grams), can be fixed onto a tripod and can get video input via BNC, YpbPr and HDMI ports, among other things.

The other display, the 10.1-inch HM-TL10T, is also meant for more or less similar applications as its smaller sibling (which are varied, like in-vehicle use for instance).

Its resolution is better, of 1,024 x 600 pixels (WSVGA), while the response time is also better than that of the 7-inch model, at 28ms.

The brightness, on the other hand, is of 'only' 250 cd/m2, while contrast ratio is the same 500:1 as that of the HM-TLB7.

Furthermore, the screen features resistive touchscreen support for fingers as well as stylus.

All in all, the newcomer measures 220.416 × 219.15 (W) mm (weighs 1,100 grams) and has even more connectors that the other panel. The list includes HDMI, DVI-D, Analog RGB and Video (RCA x 2).

That is not all that Hanwha has to offer through this panel, however. The company went as far as to integrate an internal mono speaker, as well as giving it a foldable stand and compatibility with the VESA Mounting Interface Standard (FPMPMI),

The 7-inch screen has already been listed for ¥39,980 (about 479.99)