Reduce the clutter on your desk with the user-friendly and efficient connectivity of the EliteDisplay E223d 21.5″ 16:9 IPS Docking Monitor from HP. Set up your devices and network to the display one time, then connect your laptop using a single USB Type-C cable, and you’re ready to work. To facilitate connectivity through a single cable, the USB Type-C port supports the 5 Gb/s USB 3.1 Gen 1 standard, as well as the DisplayPort 1.2 standard via DP Alt mode, and up to 65W of power for compatible devices. Other available ports include four USB 3.1 Gen 1 Type-A ports, an HDMI 1.4 input, a DisplayPort 1.2 output, a Gigabit Ethernet port, and a 3.5mm audio output. If your laptop doesn’t have a USB Type-C port, the E223d may be connected to your host system using a USB 3.1 Gen 1 Type-B port.
HP’s EliteDisplay E223d features an anti-glare panel with In-Plane Switching (IPS) technology, a native resolution of 1920 x 1080 at 60 Hz, support for 8-bit color (6-bit + AFRC), coverage for 94% of the sRGB and 72% of the NTSC color gamuts, a widescreen 16:9 aspect ratio, a static contrast ratio of 1000:1, a dynamic contrast ratio of 5,000,000:1, 250 cd/m2 brightness, 102 ppi, a 5 ms (GtG) response times, and a backlight lifespan of 30,000 hours. Using the 178° horizontal and vertical viewing angles, it is possible to watch content from virtually any position. To further help improve viewing and accessibility, the display features a vertical tilt of -5 to 23°, a swivel of 90° (-45 to 45°), and a max height adjustment of 5.9″. There is also a 100 x 100mm VESA mount which can be used to attach this display to a wall or mount an HP EliteDesk Mini directly behind it.
Amira Wolf (verified owner) –
Good image, however, monitor frequently loses connection with computer (HP and Dell laptops) while connected via USB type C connection. Made several adjustments to the monitor setting and the computers as well and issue remained.
Joy Dickinson (verified owner) –
I like the thin silver bevel and the compact size, it fits nicely over my desk on a VESA arm. But the main functional reason I purchased it was for the single USB-C cable’s ability to carry power, ethernet & USB to the laptop and to send the video to the monitor – a one cable solution to de-clutter my desktop. But after 5 months the USB-C input no longer reads on the monitor. The Mac sees the monitor but the monitor reports inactive for USB-C input. Power & Ethernet still work into the laptop but I have to now use another laptop USB-C port to send to this monitor via HDMI. And to top it off, the mac is sending the pixels to this phantom monitor and if I’m not careful my mouse ends up lost somewhere in that monitors non-existent space. It’s also making the laptop run hot – pushing 3 monitors. Thoroughly annoying. The USB-C connection was always a little flakey, I needed to un-plug and replug after sleep to wake up the wired ethernet connection, but that was manageable. There’s some low level incompatibility. I tried a factory reset, no help. Will try a firmware upgrade when I have the time…. Mac owners beware.