- Virtual CIO
How to Plan IT for an Office of 50 to 200 Staff
18 Mar, 2026







£239.50 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
The ViewSonic TD2230 is a decent, practical option if you genuinely need a touchscreen on a 21.5” screen for day-to-day business use. At ~£200 ex‑VAT, it sits in the “use it often, don’t overthink it” bracket—good for meeting rooms, reception/admin desks, simple sign-in or information screens, and any workflow where taps beats a mouse. ViewSonic’s touch implementations are usually solid enough for business environments, and the 1080p size is comfortable for typical office apps without feeling like you’re running a tiny netbook screen.
That said, I wouldn’t buy it if you’re expecting premium touchscreen smoothness, creative-grade colour accuracy, or ultra-reliable performance for heavy, continuous touch use (think intense training rooms or kiosk-style deployments). For that, you’d want to spend more or choose a model designed specifically for kiosk/multi-user durability. Also, if you don’t need touch, you’ll get better value from a non-touch monitor—because the touch feature is the whole point here. Bottom line: buy it if touch is central to the job and you want good value; skip it if your use is mainly “read emails and spreadsheets” or you need top-tier durability.

AOC
AOC 22E2UMF - LED monitor - 22" (21.5" viewable) - 1920 x 1080 Full HD (1080p) @ 75 Hz - VA - 3000:1 - HDMI, VGA, DisplayPort - speakers - black

Iiyama
iiyama ProLite TF1215MC-B1 - LED monitor - 12.1" - open frame - touchscreen - 1024 x 768 - IPS - 540 cd/m� - 1000:1 - 25 ms - HDMI, VGA, DisplayPort - black

Samsung
Samsung Odyssey OLED G8 S32FG810SU - G81SF Series - OLED monitor - gaming - 32" - 3840 x 2160 4K UHD (2160p) @ 240 Hz - 260 cd/m� - 1000000:1 - DisplayHDR 400 True Black - 0.03 ms - 2xHDMI, DisplayPort - silver

Philips
Philips 24E2N1100LB - 1000 Series - LED monitor - 24" (23.8" viewable) - 1920 x 1080 Full HD (1080p) @ 100 Hz - VA - 250 cd/m� - 4000:1 - 4 ms - HDMI, VGA - textured black