Founded on the corporate vision of “Bringing Enjoyment ‘N’ Quality to Life”, the BenQ Corporation is a world-leading human technology and solutions provider aiming to elevate and enrich every aspect of consumers’ lives. To realize this vision, the company focuses on the aspects that matter most to people today - lifestyle, business, healthcare and education - with the hope of providing people with the means to live better, increase efficiency, feel healthier and enhance learning. Such means include a delightful broad portfolio of people-driven products and embedded technologies spanning digital projectors, professional monitors, interactive large-format displays, imaging solutions, mobile computing devices, and LED lighting solutions. Because it matters.
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I can't thank you enough! I was cracking my head and only because you talked about the USB cable I plugged it on... Also my monitor only connected with the cables provided from factory
Hi. This is a good monitor. But there are a couple of points for discussion - an 8-bit+ matrix, flickering of the monitor when the brightness is reduced and mediocre colors in the HDR. Therefore, this monitor is suitable for photo editing when printing on paper, but is not sufficient for video editing and creative design (games, software, etc.). And there is no comparison with the monitor from Eizo 2740 (in my opinion - it is still better in colors for the same price).
Hi, Can we connect any generic WIFI & Bluetooth dongle to benq smart board, I have brought BenQ RM7503A, it doesn't have prebuilt WIFI and Bluetooth Or do we need to buy Benq Specific wifi and bluetooth dognle
Hello, could you explain well the issue of 10 bits, which are not real, they sell it as such, but as I have read and seen it is 8 +FRC, the difference is noticeable, I understand that yes, thank you.
the 480hz OLED that was shown at CES is absolutely insane. I hope Zowie will adopt it in the near future too and combine it with their excellent feature set and monitor designs.
Unless that OLED has BFI at its max refresh rate(unlikely) it won't have the same motion clarity I'm as Pro OLED as it gets, but let's not twist reality. Scan and hold has it's flaws in terms of motion clarity. And yes, strobing like dayac does too
Hello sir I am a RU-vid Expert .I saw some problem in your channel .Can I give some tips about your RU-vid Channel?I am waiting for your response Thank You🤍
Every year I get sucked into the monitor debate trying to decide what to do and weather I’ll be an old man when I finally give in and buy a 60 year old product and wish I had done it in my teens. Say you have a powerful flashlight, almost a laser and you point it at a zombie 10 metres down a 2 metre wide hallway, how much of that light would realistically bleed onto the ivory walls and would there be a clear 100% black between the walls and the zombie down the hallway as far as that zombie might be? Maybe the distance at which the black is not clipped while the flashlight is still effective and the ivory walls have non repeating texture with visible contrast between texels(?). The above would need to be comprised of a good long hallway, a large monitor to make out the figure from a 50m distance, enough pixels to fill the black gap between the wall and the zombie, a well lit figure and light trail (nits) - and hallway walls that have subsurface scattering that would potentially benefit from higher bitrates: especially when compensating for the granular torch movements. The bitrate (I was meant to say depth but let’s roll with it) requires good cinematic frame rates (25-75?) and a possibility of colours that will comprise the “single (but very not single in the context of ray tracing)” shade of wall colour or other basic artistic effects like blemishes (overrated). To me it sounds like I need a display with a higher pixel density towards the centre, lots of possible colours in a dim lighting condition, lots of ray tracing and subsurface scattering with as little post sharpening additives, anything else would from an economic point of view would be a lie. I probably don’t need over 60fps, I probably want lots of nits with local dimming, 10 bits deep along the left and right sides to fill the hallways (for a realistic depth of field). I guess the factors I don’t want to think about are those: the resolutionXframe-rateXDitherring…. As a pixel, say the tip of the tooth of a zombie moves: how much of the next frame should be predictable and be able to make use of transitioning colour? I think this has a lot to do with the producer’s render resolution, as the card needs has more information to make its (my head explodes here) transition without guessing, which u think this ability to do such a thing might benefit the use of displays well over 90FPS maybe 500+. I think this is stuff that direct x and Vulcan and maybe OpenGL do on behalf of the artists whom pretend they’re game devs but are really piggy backing the rendering technology. Well I guess I’ll just have to wait another year while my money sits in my bank account and I ponder ending my life because I can’t decide between food or not rate for my dopeamine fix and my doctor won’t prescribe me anything more than deuloxetine (what a weird0) check out my chanel I produced that music when I was 15
i had presonus eris 3,5 and they made noise after a while... got me a creative soundbar they are almost the same lol but alot more compact... i want to get me a smart monitor , if the speakers are good i will go completey without speakers...
Ok I declare horseshit when he touts the trap door for the color puck. You tune one of these perhaps once a year or less. BW modes are useless because they do a conversion without the image creator's decision making. Watching this guy calibrate a monitor is like watching paint dry. He never mentions the calibrator is not included with the monitor. How fast the shade goes together is meaningless. He really says nothing in this vid.
I just re-watched Ian Van der Wolde’s webinar on monitor calibration. It was most informative thankyou> However the following question cam to me after watching. In regard to white point setting. Ian stated the Benq monitors are recommended to be set at D65 for photography. The printer I use for Photo printing photo books ( Momento pro) has recommended a setting of D50.(?) Ian mentioned this is the standard for printing. My question is what white point setting would you recommend for the most accurate colour representation? I have ICC profiles from the printer for soft proofing that I use with Adobe Photoshop. Thankyou in advance for your response.
people need to stfu about the weight, ooh buhu cry me a rainbow its not 19grams alloy from space with some ultra sapphire/glass feet, and a 3395! you all are sold to this gaming gimmic that the latsest sensor and low weight and 8000hz polling rate is going to help you ingame. and people can still not aim! thats called marketing, even if you slow down the picture side by side with 1000hz or 8000hz to a 1000fps you cant tell a different and how the fuck is your eyes in a fragment of a millisecond going to se that difference! you all have placebo. go into kovaaks and aim practice instead