Quote from: Hunter2020 on December 20, 2022, 15:36:23I have a 300 nits monitor, have to turn the brightness down to 25% to stop it from hurting my eyes. Who in the world wants a 1200 nits monitor?
I have one very old monitor out of several with 350 nits by datasheet. I use it for 14+ years on with 0% brightness and 30% contrast. It too bright...Even after 14 years, it delivers over 300 nits at 100% brightness and 80% contrast. 1200? fot what if even on a sunny day, 50% contrast and 0% brightness are enough for me in the room with 14+ years age montor?
I also have an old 2006 SPVA from Samsung in one corner, which is already slightly hooked, but has not been used for a long time, although it is working. There, the backlights flare up quite slowly. In the 14 year old, it is also already clear that the CCFL backlight begins to sag, although after warming up (~5-6 min) the brightness is more than enough even for 30% contrast and 0% brightness. It has already worked on the counter for more than 38100 hours...
Much worse is that the new monitor has only 1100 backlight zones (in the iPad 4000+, despite the fact that this is much more noticeable on the monitor due to its size). Instead of at least 8000 zones. We are waiting for microLED, a complete analogue of AMOLED. BUT without low-frequency flicker - otherwise we don't need it either.
Well, 4k resolution at 31 "does not suit me - only 8k, so that there are perfectly sharp fonts even in Chrome, where it is impossible to turn off muddy black and white anti-aliasing. Fortunately, so far FireFox shows sharply with a single checkmark in the settings. Only he and saves, although it does not have a built-in translator from other languages, and some sites are not translated normally in FireFox - apparently Google intends to put spokes in the wheels of Mozilla.
Quote from: Price Tag on December 20, 2022, 15:41:38ThinkVision P32pz-30 >> $1,699 ??? >> $1,999
ThinkVision P27pz-30 >> $1,999 ??? >> $1,699
27" 4k has a higher ppi compared to 31", so it's better in font clarity, so it's more professional and more expensive. =)
In general, I prefer 23" monitors with 4k - but even there ppi is only around 196, but about 300 is needed...