The company touts the DreamColor monitors as a cheaper alternative to high-end backlit LCDs.
The screens offer more than a billion colours and support a range of colour display standards including AdobeRGB, NTSC and sRGB.
DreamColor will be targeted at graphics houses, film producers and animation studios in which accurate colour presentation is crucial.
HP said that the system was developed in cooperation with animation studio Dreamworks. The companies have been working for two years to develop a series of displays and printers that all provide identical colour displays.
"For decades, storytellers have struggled to manage colour in an accurate and consistent manner," said Dreamworks chief executive Jeffrey Katzenberg.
"Quite simply, when we make a movie about a big green ogre our concern is that our ogre is the same colour of green throughout the film."
HP taps Dreamworks for new screens
Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Partner Content
Promoted Content
Why Australia’s Industrial Leaders Are Turning to Dynamic Aspect for Dynamics 365 Business Central
Fabric workshops help partners tap into data services demand growth.
Think Technology Australia deliver massive ROI to a Toyota dealership through SharePoint-powered, automated document management
Promoted Content
Have ticket queues become your quiet business risk?
AI PCs shift from hype to revenue opportunity for partners




