However, one thing BenQ does very good is: it really gives you very clear text rendering if your major time for the monitor is text editing
The worst but no least, the text is not clear: it is either too blurry or too sharp even with the built-in display mode
Vivid accurate color right out of the box with sharp picture (text looks great also)
I'm an analyst/programmer and I usage is mostly character-based; though I don't require perfect color or absolutely uniform brightness, I do require high resolution, clarity of text and rock solid stability, as I need to display many terminal window simultaneosly, with many having very small text.
I do understand that there is no perfect product and there is no 0% defective rate, but Asus should have done better QC with it high-end product, and this kind of obvious defects should never get out of the factory
Awesome price and product
Great product but not perfect.
You are reading snippets from reviews of ASUS PA248Q 24" ProArt Professional 1920x1200 IPS HDMI Eye Care Monitor
Support has expired as of 60 days ago, so I'll never be able to utilize that feature, which really stinks.
It is a top quality monitor, but I ended up with this digital-production display because of the dearth of options in 2016 when you want to daisy-chain your display-port monitors together
Nice picture quality, but I use this for writing programs and the text on this screen does look slightly blurry on the edges
This improved the image quality significantly and even surpassed that of my Dell screen
A sharp and even display with just the right amount of anti-reflective coating
The display is awesome and the USB 3 ports are a huge help for me.
Were it not that I was SO looking forward to receiving the monitor today and putting it into immediate use, I might have enjoyed the spider-web cracked LED display
For much of my career, I'd used Apple products and the revered cinema display
Support has expired as of 60 days ago, so I'll never be able to utilize that feature, which really stinks.
Not wholly impressed with the USB function of this monitor or the preceding Asus monitor that did similar things with the USB.Update: Screen is developing occasional flickers in portions, looks like processing problems, it is not the back light
Sadly, when I hooked it up and powered it up, I was heartbroken to find the screen had been damaged in shipping
But about 6 months before the warranty expired, the screen went haywire
In order to view in sRGB with a darker screen you're forced to use a calibration device.
In summary, this screen is awesome after calibration but you have to go through that process it to get the most of it
After I check the screen thoroughly, I found totally FIFTEEN dead pixels
I have done 3 returns, a total of 4 monitors, and was unable to get one without dead pixels near the center of the screen and unacceptable amounts of back light bleed
Don't buy this monitor unless you can live with dead pixels in the center of the screen.
In the center of the screen, a very large group of dark pixels
Stunning presentation of RAW files and the size makes pixel peeking a breeze.
More about ASUS PA248Q 24" ProArt Professional 1920x1200 IPS HDMI Eye Care Monitor
Size:24.1-Inch
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Style:sRGB
Experience professional-grade color accuracy and reproduction with the ASUS PA248Q ProArt display featuring 16:10, 1920 x 1200 HD A+ IPS panel for 178 Degree ultra-wide viewing angle
Each PA248Q is factory pre-calibrated to 100% sRGB color with color differential of ∆E < 5 right out of box