- Internet & Connectivity
How to Troubleshoot Common Business Network Issues
18 Mar, 2026







£946.38 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
The Samsung S32FG816SU is the kind of 32" 4K OLED monitor that only really makes sense if you care a lot about picture quality and you’ll actually benefit from OLED contrast day-to-day. For someone doing mixed work—spreadsheets plus design/video, or presentation-heavy roles where colour and black levels matter—this will feel like a step up you notice immediately. £788.65 ex-VAT isn’t cheap, but OLED can be worth it in an office if your “content” is real and varied (not just static dashboards all day).
That said, I wouldn’t recommend it for typical accounts-payable, admin, or any team living on static UI/lettering for hours—burn-in risk is the big practical downside, and you’ll need good habits (task bar hiding, screen shifting, dark mode policies) to sleep well. Also, if your priority is pure productivity and you don’t need OLED-level contrast, you could usually get a more cost-effective 32" 4K or even a better multi-monitor setup for the same budget. Buy this if your users are visually demanding and you’re willing to manage OLED usage; skip it if the screen is mostly static information or you want the “set and forget” option.

AOC
AOC AGON PRO AG276QSG2 - LED monitor - gaming - 27" - 2560 x 1440 QHD @ 360 Hz - Fast IPS - 600 cd/m� - 1000:1 - DisplayHDR 600 - 0.3 ms - 3xHDMI, DisplayPort - speakers - black, grey

Philips
Philips 32B1N3800 - 3000 Series - LED monitor - 32" (31.5" viewable) - 3840 x 2160 4K UHD (2160p) @ 60 Hz - VA - 350 cd/m� - 3500:1 - 4 ms - 2xHDMI, DisplayPort - speakers - black

Asus
ASUS VY27UQ - LED monitor - 27" - 3840 x 2160 4K @ 60 Hz - IPS - 350 cd/m� - 1000:1 - HDR10 - 5 ms - HDMI, DisplayPort - speakers - black

Dell
Dell Pro Plus P2725DE - LED monitor - 27" - 2560 x 1440 QHD @ 100 Hz - IPS - 350 cd/m� - 1500:1 - 5 ms - HDMI, DisplayPort, USB-C - BTO - with 3 years Basic Hardware Service with Advanced Exchange after remote diagnosis