Dell’s videoconferencing monitor has a 4K webcam, USB-C hub, and more

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The first obvious sign of 4K support is the 3840 x 2160 panel on the UltraSharp monitor. It also has a built-in 4K webcam, perfect for the age of telecommuting and working from home. You can connect the monitor to the laptop with a single cable that will give you a video signal and 90W of power.

The U3223QZ is a Dell monitor with a Sony 4K HDR STARVIS sensor. The monitor has two built-in microphones, which is similar to the technology that Dell uses for its $200 external UltraSharp webcam. You will be able to adjust the camera's tilt by 20 degrees, and switch between 65, 78, and 90- degree fields of view. If you want to show up crystal clear in meetings, you should add all of that together.

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You can show up in meetings crystal clear with the help of the webcams and Windows Hello.

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The display is 31.5 inches and runs at 60Hz. It will probably not be a game streamer's first pick, but a built-in face cam would be handy, and it should be fine for a home office. It has two 14W speakers built in, which should let you hear anyone you are talking to well enough, though they might appreciate it if you just used headphones.

There is more to the monitor than the screen and videoconferencing features. It acts as a hub, giving you access to five 10Gbps ports, as well as a second port. You can daisy-chain another 4K monitor if your computer supports display stream compression. The U3223QZ has a dedicated Microsoft Teams button on the front.

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You only need a single cable to connect to the monitor, because Dell has packed it with ports.

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It has two input ports, and if you plug in multiple devices, you can view them in picture-by-picture or picture-in-picture modes. It also has a built-in KVM, which allows you to use one pair of peripherals with multiple computers.

The ergonomics of the U3223QZ stand seems solid, with tilt, swivel, and height adjustments, and the ability to turn the monitor vertically according to Dell's 3D demo. It also has 100mm x 100mm VESA mounting holes for attaching the display to the monitor arm.

Dell says it will share pricing information closer to the release date for the monitor.

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