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I've taken a look at several of Alogic's 4K displays over the past couple of years, but the company has taken things to the next level with its new 27-inch Clarity 5K Touch display. Announced nearly a year ago, the Clarity 5K Touch recently began shipping to deliver not only a high-quality display experience with sufficient pixel density of 218 pixels per inch for full Retina support, but also touchscreen functionality via both stylus and fingers.

alogic-clarity-5k-touch-mbp.jpg

I've been testing out the Clarity 5K Touch for a few weeks, and I've come away impressed with the display quality and overall functionality, though the regular $1,600 price tag may give some potential customers pause when weighing it against other non-Apple 5K display options.

Alogic's Clarity 5K Touch offers a resolution of 5120 × 2880, and packing that many pixels into a 27-inch display means it can show a 2560 × 1440 HiDPI desktop in excellent true Retina quality at typical viewing distances. This yields crisp text and graphics without potential performance penalties and visual artifacts that can result from non-pixel-perfect scaling at lower pixel densities.

Display quality on the Clarity 5K Touch was excellent in my testing, essentially indistinguishable from my MacBook Pro (aside from ProMotion support) or my usual LG UltraFine 5K external displays running in Retina mode. Text and images appear super-sharp on the display, with individual pixels not visible until I get quite close to the display, as you'd expect at this pixel density. The display offers a 1,000:1 contrast ratio and up to 400 nits of typical brightness, which is a bit lower than Apple's notebooks and the Studio Display which can offer 500–600 nits of typical SDR brightness indoors, but the Clarity 5K Touch was plenty bright enough in my workspace.

alogic-clarity-5k-touch-closeup.jpg

Color calibration appeared excellent out of the box, with everything looking vibrant yet natural and closely matching the other displays in my setup. The Clarity 5K Touch supports 100% of the sRGB gamut and 99% of the Adobe RGB and DCI-P3 gamuts, and it features HDR400 support.

The Clarity 5K Touch is a glossy display, and while Alogic says it features an anti-reflective finish, the glossiness is very evident if you use it in an environment where there is any significant amount of glare such as direct lighting or nearby windows. Depending on the relative locations and angles of those lighting sources and your seating position, the glare can interfere with visibility at times, so that's something to be aware of as you consider where you're planning to use the display.

alogic-clarity-5k-touch-stand.jpg

The display's construction feels solid, with the stand made primarily of silver aluminum for good heft and stability. A hole in the stand neck helps route cables to minimize their visibility. In addition to adjustable height over a range of 145 mm, the Clarity 5K Touch also supports tilt (5º forward to 20º back), swivel (up to 25º left or right), and pivot adjustments for maximum flexibility. You can pivot the display all the way to 90 degrees if you prefer to use the display in portrait orientation, while tilt and swivel help you get the display in just the right position, which is especially helpful in trying to mitigate glare. Support for 100×100 VESA mounts is also included if you prefer a different mounting solution.

The display body features a silver plastic enclosure on the rear with ventilation holes toward the top and bottom, which is perfectly adequate in my opinion considering I'm hardly ever going to look at the rear of it. Even so, it's a simple and clean design, just without the high-quality aluminum you'd find on an Apple display.

Around the screen itself, the black bezels aren't the thinnest I've encountered, with uniform size around the top and sides and a slightly chunkier bottom bezel, some of which no doubt going toward housing the touchscreen hardware. The bezels are essentially entirely underneath the display glass aside from a very narrow plastic strip around the perimeter, which does help hide them a bit, especially if using a dark desktop and/or dark mode.

alogic-clarity-5k-touch-rear.jpg

One area where the Clarity 5K Touch tops the Apple Studio Display is in the connectivity department, with Alogic's display offering not only a USB-C connection option but also a pair of HDMI 2.0 ports and a DisplayPort 1.4 port, allowing you to hook up multiple devices and easily switch the display between them or even show multiple sources simultaneously with picture-in-picture modes. The USB-C and DisplayPort ports support up to 5K resolution at 60 Hz, while the HDMI ports support up to 5K resolution at 30 Hz, so while you're not going to get the sharpest gaming response out of this display, I've found it to be perfectly acceptable for less demanding daily work.

alogic-clarity-5k-touch-ports.jpg

Other than some resolution and orientation options managed through the Settings app on your Mac, the various inputs and other display settings are handled through an on-screen display menu system, which is a bit lacking in the visuals department as is par for the course on these types of controls. Buttons hidden along the bottom right edge of the display allow you to move through the various settings, and you'll need to use these buttons to adjust speaker volume and display brightness, as native Mac keyboard control for these is not supported.

In addition to those various connectivity options for display sources, the Clarity 5K Touch also includes a USB-B 3.0 port for upstream data, and the display includes a pair of USB-A 3.0 ports (5 Gbps data, 7.5W charging) to serve as a hub for connecting wired accessories as long as there is either a USB-C or USB-B connection to the computer to facilitate data transfer. There's also a 3.5mm audio jack for connecting headphones or a speaker system, though it is output-only, so microphone input is not supported.

When connected over USB-C, the Clarity 5K Touch can support up to 65 watts of charging to a connected computer, but this drops to 4... Click here to read rest of article

Article Link: Review: Alogic's Clarity 5K Touch Delivers a Sharp High-Resolution Display With Touchscreen Support
 
Has anyone even tried to use their PC laptop with touchscreen.. Its rubbish.. The physics don't work and even worse for a standing screen...! This is never going to be a good idea unless we are in space..

Yeah, the only way this works is if the monitor is mounted to something is your primary input. On a typical desk the monitor should be out of reach from your chair. But as far as I know Mac OS isn't setup for using a monitor only.
 
Has anyone even tried to use their PC laptop with touchscreen.. Its rubbish.. The physics don't work and even worse for a standing screen...! This is never going to be a good idea unless we are in space..
Yes, I used it on a laptop with both Windows and some Linux distros. It was great, and I still miss that ability on my MacBooks. I also use it daily on my iPad with the Magic Keyboard "stand".

That said, I agree. Using it on a regular "office" standing screen that's farther away is much, much less appealing. POS systems and kiosks are fine, though.
 
If you were to plug in your iPad to this monitor for a second screen, would the touch screen work the same way it would on the iPad? Maybe not multi-touch, but if you tap on an app on this monitor, would it open?
 
Has anyone even tried to use their PC laptop with touchscreen.. Its rubbish.. The physics don't work and even worse for a standing screen...! This is never going to be a good idea unless we are in space..
Yeah, it would need to be mounted at a 45º angle right past my keyboard, with its bottom part touching the desk and at arm's length (less than 2' away), the same way digitizer displays are mounted and used.

Mounting it as a regular monitor is useless for all practical use, unless this monitor is used as kiosk.
 
i know all of the benefits of using a 5K display on macOS but i recently got a 4K 27in 144hz display and im perfectly happy with it. I got it used but a new one is around $500. I just dont see the value of spending $1000 more for 78% more pixels with a 5K display but only 60hz (which would be very noticeable to me)

I'd rather get a 4K 27in OLED 120hz for $800-$1000 than a $1500 5K 60hz. but thats just me. I mostly use my monitor for coding
 
Has anyone even tried to use their PC laptop with touchscreen.. Its rubbish.. The physics don't work and even worse for a standing screen...! This is never going to be a good idea unless we are in space..
The touchscreen works perfectly well on my Thinkpad. I use it in conjunction with a mouse, not instead of a mouse.
 
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The touchscreen works perfectly well on my Thinkpad. I use it in conjunction with a mouse, not instead of a mouse.
And you don't use a mouse at all on your Thinkpad anymore I bet.. I have also a from work Thinkpad.. those guys even though to include the little red joystick which wears down your finger nicely.. throwback to the 90's tech, so laughable.. Then there is the fact when you open the Thinkpad or most for that matter, it pulls up the keyboard along with it.. Can't someone besides apple design a proper hinge??
 
And you don't use a mouse at all on your Thinkpad anymore I bet..
Screenshot 2025-05-29 at 3.52.56 PM.png
I have also a from work Thinkpad.. those guys even though to include the little red joystick which wears down your finger nicely.. throwback to the 90's tech, so laughable..
Some people swear by the nipple pointer, but I never got used to it.
Then there is the fact when you open the Thinkpad or most for that matter, it pulls up the keyboard along with it.. Can't someone besides apple design a proper hinge??
Not sure which one you have but the hinge on mine works as you would expect and doesn't move the keyboard at all. The screen even opens all the way flat which is great with the touchscreen when I'm not seated at a desk.

IBM used some clever keyboard designs on their think pads. I particularly remember the small Thinkpad with a physically split butterfly keyboard that would expand to full size when open.
 
Yes, I used it on a laptop with both Windows and some Linux distros. It was great, and I still miss that ability on my MacBooks. I also use it daily on my iPad with the Magic Keyboard "stand".
Personally I don’t find touch particularly useful on my laptop. I prefer the trackpad as long as it’s a good trackpad. But I do use touch on my iPad+Magic Keyboard (maybe half touch and half trackpad), because the trackpad is a bit small (first gen MK), but more importantly because the iPad is closer to me due to the short keyboard+trackpad area and the cantilever design.

Edit- oh of course also touch is more useful for me on iPad because it’s more of a touch UI than Windows.
 
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It would be nice if the touch input would work with iPad screen mirroring, for an ST:TNG-like panel installation.
 
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If you were to plug in your iPad to this monitor for a second screen, would the touch screen work the same way it would on the iPad? Maybe not multi-touch, but if you tap on an app on this monitor, would it open?
I could be wrong but I don’t think this will work. Primarily due to the fact you have to install a macOS program to get the touchscreen capability.
 
i know all of the benefits of using a 5K display on macOS but i recently got a 4K 27in 144hz display and im perfectly happy with it. I got it used but a new one is around $500. I just dont see the value of spending $1000 more for 78% more pixels with a 5K display but only 60hz (which would be very noticeable to me)

I'd rather get a 4K 27in OLED 120hz for $800-$1000 than a $1500 5K 60hz. but thats just me. I mostly use my monitor for coding

I really like my 32” 4k

Thinking of going oled
 
The question is can the touchscreen functionality replace a Wacom or XP Pen drawing tablet, thereby saving a huge amount of money for digital artists? Pity the review didn't investigate.
 
I find it a bit odd that someone to whom the resolution of a 5K monitor is important would want fingerprint laden touchscreen input. But generally , this seems like a worthwhile investment.

As for the old touchscreen laptop argument, I generally observe it is only used for scrolling, little else. Which is not to belittle it as an option, as that is actually handy. But an iPad interface it ain’t.
 
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