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Rapporter et oversættelsesproblem



First thing to do open the box and take it out I guess.
its to periodically shift the image one pixel each direction to reduce burn on single bright pixels
and spread its burn to surrounding pixels
on tvs its fine, since they default to overscan anyway
on a monitor, desktop edges will be moved sometimes hiding the edge pixels on the desktop area
imho, first thing it to turn brightness down to like 75-80%, to reduce burn by that amount
'pixel refresh' burns the inverse image so the entire display gets burned more evenly, making burned areas less noticeable since its all burned
other features will overdrive burned pixels to make them appear less burned
those are all tricks to make the monitor appear less burned, but when compared to a new monitor of the same panel it will not be the same overall brightness
this is pixel shift, its only a feature on oled panels
https://youtu.be/wxDo1D3wRZs
edit url fixed
I'm not sure if it's actually pixel shift, but in my monitor setting it's called pixel orbiting, and when I have some static picture on screen, sometimes i notice the image/pixels get shifted to side.
https://youtu.be/wxDo1D3wRZs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c0rcmpMPg9c
I don't know why they have it, i was told only OLED panels benefit from pixel shift, but i left it turned on just in case because it's turned on by default.
thats how you get the famous oled burn in
unless its a dirt cheap panel that has a tendency to burn
but an ips panel should not do that
its manual does say alot about dead pixel warranty
https://www.usa.philips.com/c-p/273V7QJAB_27/full-hd-lcd-monitor/support
so maybe its just an extremely poor ips panel that needs something to help prevent burn
https://psteamcommunity.yuanyoumao.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=3613414347&fileuploadsuccess=1