4) The stand. The stand, like the specifications, sounded great on paper. However, when you actually use it, another conclusion can be drawn: what were the engineers at Samsung thinking?! The cable management is awful! In order to get to the only port (DVI-I), you must get to the underside of the stand. Once you do that, you must squeeze the cord into a little, curved, cut-out path and then struggle in the small space to secure the cable. Okay, so we can't see the top of the DVI-I cable... is that really worth all of this trouble though? Also, having the USB ports behind the screen is a bit of a pain.
5) The glossy finish. Again, looks great in the pictures and sound great when you read it, but in use, it is an avoidable annoyance. In my light setting, the glossy finish reflects light and gives me glare. Even worse, the glossy finish reflects the image that is being displayed on the screen on the sides. This is annoying.
6) Backlight. This model has one of the best backlights I have seen, but it is not flawless. The model does bleed in the corners with the bottom corners bleeding a bit more than the top. Thankfully, though, this problem is only obvious on black screens.
Because I was really hoping this panel would be the one for me, I gave it two and half weeks before taking any action, thinking that perhaps I just had to (or could) get used to its faults. After said time, I went to my local CompUSA and bought another unit of the same model to make sure the defects weren't unique to my unit. Much to my dismay, the new one I bought had the exact same reddish ringing and ghosting problems, and the backlight bleeding on this unit was even more pronounced.
I simply cannot recommend this model to anyone other than a graphic designer, and even then, there are better models (IPS panels) for that kind of thing.
I have placed an order for a new VP930b (the latest revision that has 1300:1 contrast, 300 nit brightness). I sincerely hope that it will be the one for me.