• Reviews around eye strain (2.14 of 5)

    ASUS MX259H 25-Inch, Full HD 1920x1080 IPS, Audio by Bang & Olufsen ICEpower HDMI VGA Frameless Monitor

    • Looks nice, but gives bad eye strain.
    • Light weight, good quality, nice image...perfect for eye strain, because the screen is like matte photo paper...hard to describe but very durable
    • It arrived just as described with no noticeable glare and above all no more eye strain.
    • Definitely the best monitor I've ever owned, and not just because of size or resolution, it comes down to things you can't put on paper - color accuracy, backlight quality & consistency, viewing angle, eye strain... and all this depends heavily on the video settings, so if you buy this, PLEASE set to the following values, even if it seems at first to be lower light and warmer color, just give it time, your eyes will adjust:Blue Light Filter: 0Color: Brightness: 55
    • I actually downgraded from a 32" TV monitor, however the TV was only 720p and seeing every individual pixel from 2 feet away was giving me serious eye strain
    • The net effect of this is that this fancy "certified flicker free" "eye care" monitor flickers more and produces more eye strain than my ten year old flourescent-lit LCD monitor.
    • Been using this display for over a year, so far, no problems, less eye strain.
    • I purchased this monitor because it was marketed as certified flicker-free and I happen to be highly sensitive to flicker (the kind most people don't "see" but instead experience as eye strain, headaches etc).
    • I am on the computer for most of the day, and have had no problems whatsoever with eye strain/fatigue, nor with anything technical
    • n’t want the power adapter freely hanging in the air.
    • As a Mac user, I am very picky on the quality of my monitor and I have been suffering as of late with the lack of color-consistency between my Macbook's screen and the monitor I was using.
    • I use it with a macbook pro 15 inch and it seems to be just as good as if i was using a thunderbolt display from apple
    • Text isn't quite as sharp as on my 24" lcd monitor, but it isn't so bad that you couldn't use this as a primary monitor, in my opinion
    • You'll be shocked and run as fast as you can to a different brand; i kinda wish I had but the saving grace is their hardware realy is pretty solid and perfoms very well
    • I am not a big graphics snob so if your a
    • It can be considered as good as or even better than the 27UD88 one
    • You think they would make it a easy non snap way to pop the back off where you install all your cabling
    • The LED LCD has almost zero ghosting and is plenty fast enough for everyday use as well as for gaming with its 4 MS time
    • This monitor has the best and deepest blacks I've ever seen
    • Very bad button location/sensitivity - a possible work around would be to get a separate HDMI selector and use that instead - which I strong recommend if your going to use different inputs.2