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Is this a marriage or a feature of ips?
Good afternoon, I bought a 23 "LG 23MP57A-P monitor, I'm already sitting for the second day and trying to set it up, which I just didn't do, but I can't find the optimal settings, or it's too bright and hurts my eyes or too dull or gray is not gray (this is so and I couldn’t decide, it’s supposedly gray, but when compared with other monitors, it clearly gives off yellow)
I tried through the windows calibration, at the stage where you need to adjust the brightness so that X is not visible, it goes from 1 to 100 brightness and x is not a bit I almost disappeared from visibility.
Tell me please, is this a marriage? Or is it still a feature of ips? Terribly unpleasant to sit at this monitor
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1. And what kind of external lighting? I want perfect colors - first make normal external lighting.
2. IPS, unlike TN, has just the best color reproduction.
“grey is not gray” - your monitor probably has blue reduction built in. Try to dig into the settings, especially in the modes (and in some of them you can not turn off the option). I advise you to turn this option off and readjust yourself according to this quote:
To make the image MUCH nicer, reducing the blue color will help. Please note that when reducing the blue, you must also reduce the green color. The decrease in green should be 3–3.5 times less than the decrease in blue. For example, if you reduce blue by 6%, then green should be reduced by 1.85%.
I advise all people to reduce blue by at least 3% (and therefore green by 0.92%). The image will become more beautiful at times.
1) White color will become too "burning out". This will increase eye strain.
However, you shouldn't get too carried away. Excessive reduction of blue is fraught with the following consequences:
2) The image will become less natural.
3) Even if at some point in time it seems that the image looks better, in fact it looks worse.
For these reasons, blue reduction should not exceed 12%. This is the limit. As a result, blue should be reduced by a number from 3 to 12%, but I recommend from 6 to 9%.
PS. Don't get carried away with reducing green - the green reduction factor should not be less than 3, otherwise it will lead to burnt white.
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