The 1901FP's physical design is good overall, it swivels smoothly 45 degrees to each side, and it tilts a mere 20 degrees backward and 5 degrees forward--but the panel's 170-degree horizontal and vertical viewing angles make it view-able from almost any position. Hit the release button at the bottom of the neck, and the telescoping neck will add 5.1 inches of height to the display. A similar button on the back of the panel detaches the display from the neck so that you can connect the 1901FP to a VESA wall- or arm-mount (hardware not included). The panel pivots from Landscape to Portrait mode, making legal-size documents and Web pages easier to view. You can download pivot software from Dell's Web site (registration required), but we wish it came bundled with the display. Compatible with PCs and Macs, the 1901FP also accepts both analog and digital video signals. The display has a whopping five USB 2.0 ports (one upstream, four downstream)--two on one side of the panel, three in back. A pliable silver loop on the back of the neck corrals the cables. Three small, silver, clearly labeled buttons on the bezel let you adjust the 1901FP's image settings via easy-to-navigate onscreen menus.