Far from the most expensive home and office monitors, in the production of which the manufacturing company has made an unexpected emphasis on design. A typical representative of this line is made according to the patterns of business-class monitors: the side frames are thinner than a razor blade, the chrome-plated leg emphasizes the elegance of the design, and the electronics are hidden in a small block at the bottom of the rear panel, due to which the thickness of the display itself is a few millimeters. As they say in HP itself, "It Looks Good, Feels Good and Does Good." However, it's not only beautiful, but also convenient: any HP M monitor is perfect for deploying low-cost multi-monitor configurations.


The rest of the HP M is a typical all-in-one monitor that both ours and yours want to please. So that your eyes do not get tired during work, each monitor is armed with a whole range of eye protection, including Flicker-Free, Eye Ease and a high-quality blue filter. And the display itself is characterized by high contrast and the presence of anti-reflective coating. If you're spontaneously tempted to play the new Far Cry or COD, HP M monitors support AMD's FreeSync feature and often feature 75Hz refresh rates. This, of course, is not full-fledged 144 Hz, but not bad either. Plus, these devices demonstrate good color reproduction (note: most often 99% of the sRGB triangle), so they are quite suitable for not too complicated work with photo processing, vector graphics and coloring.

The range of the M series has less than ten monitors similar to each other, which differ only in the diagonal of the display and in some small nuances. For example, instead of a 75 Hz sweep, it can only support 60 Hz. It's best to check this before buying. In all cases, high-end IPS matrices with Full HD or 2K resolution are used. Sales are dominated by semi-TVs with a 27-inch display diagonal, followed by universal 22- and 24-inch monitors. A set of connection ports usually includes a pair of HDMI version 1.4 and one VGA output. Less common are variations with DisplayPort and USB-C.