The MP704 works in conjunction with an external power brick which brings a DC
power lead up to the rear of the display. Interestingly enough, the patch
cables are all white, and not the standard black.
Other
than that there really isn't too much to take notice on the MP704 - the unit has
a
clean front with a five button control panel, and a pushbutton power button
with green LED. The rear of the monitor is vented to prevent
over heating and while there is a kensington
security lock hole, the stand is not removable for wall mounting. The monitor is relatively portable
as the stand will fold up or down for storage, or shipping. This could be useful
if the unit were being used in conjunction with a travelling presentation as the
unit would store in a space roughly 3" thick.
The stand will allow the MP704 display to tilt just 2 degrees forward, and
up to 90 degrees backwards. Given the rather shallow up/down viewing angles you would see some image loss if things were tilted
too far back. The left and right viewing angels are not the widest, but they are sufficient for most
environments.
The stand is fixed as we
mentioned and there are no vertical or rotating adjustments built in. If the
user wants the display up higher it will have be propped up on a stand of
some sort. Rotating the unit left and right on a castor is not really practical
as the entire display wM