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Post Date | Sold By | Sale Price | Activity |
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06/08/24 | Dell Technologies | $720 frontpage |
51 |
06/04/24 | Best Buy | $799.99 |
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04/18/24 | Best Buy | $750 |
3 |
03/25/24 | Dell Technologies | $778 frontpage |
50 |
02/15/24 | Dell Technologies | $800 |
7 |
02/09/24 | Best Buy | $799.99 |
7 |
01/23/24 | Dell Technologies | $800 popular |
16 |
11/24/23 | Dell Technologies | $800 frontpage |
98 |
11/08/23 | Best Buy | $800 frontpage |
70 |
10/28/23 | Best Buy | $800 frontpage |
52 |
10/10/23 | Dell Technologies | $799 |
6 |
10/09/23 | Best Buy | $849.99 |
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10/06/23 | Dell Technologies | $800 frontpage |
145 |
09/01/23 | Dell Technologies | $899.99 |
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08/16/23 | Dell Technologies | $900 frontpage |
77 |
07/28/23 | Dell Technologies | $899 |
13 |
07/06/23 | Dell Technologies | $900 frontpage |
84 |
02/09/23 | Dell Technologies | $1,000 popular |
39 |
02/02/23 | Dell Technologies | $990 frontpage |
136 |
01/19/23 | Dell Technologies | $1000 frontpage |
207 |
Sold By | Sale Price |
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Best Buy | $799.99 |
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This only sucks because I use it when I work from home for 8 hours or more a day and it is frustrating to have to run the refresher in the middle of my shift.
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Yes, i got the notification.
The 38" is not OLED.
Set my 38" up on Thursday and I'm loving it
They're two completely different monitors. The 34" has the best HDR experience of any monitor on the market. The 38" doesn't have a useable true HDR, as it has two few local dimming zones. It's an IPS panel, instead of the QD-OLED in the 34". The 34" is better in every way (faster response times, higher color gamut, incredible HDR, less overshoot, etc), aside from the obvious risk of burn-in on an OLED panel. There's also the non-standard pixel layout on QD-OLED that can cause some text fringing, but it's not really noticeable unless you put your face right up to the screen. The 34" is a far superior gaming monitor, but the 38" is probably the better choice for productivity work. I got the 34" about a month ago, and it's jaw-dropping how much better the HDR gaming experience is than the 38" that I upgraded from. Games that looked decent on the old Alienware look stunningly beautiful on the QD-OLED.
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We'll I caved Oct/Nov of last year after seeing multiple highly rated reviews of this monitor. I upgraded from a Asus ROG Swift PG279QZ IPS 165hz.
I have not regretted paying full price for a single second. Sure it has the pixel refresh pop-up after so many hours. You know what I do, I ignore it. It goes away after about 10 -20 seconds. When I'm finished with the monitor or know I'm going to be away for more than 15 minutes I just turn the monitor off and back on and the pixel refresh pop-up is there. I initiate it and let it do its thing while I'm gone. It's great when I'm not going to be using it for hours as it will turn the monitor off after the pixel refresh has completed.
I do agree, this is probably not a good productivity monitor. Why would you buy an "Alienware" monitor anyway for office type work.
If you love PC gaming I don't see why you will not love this screen. Maybe if your into serious competitive play, then you'd want a 24" 1000hz screen. But the AW3423DWF keeps me warm and comfy on those weekend days and late nights of hardcore gaming.
The panels have nothing to do with the coating. A manufacturer can get a 1st gen QD-OLED panel and they can slap on matte, glossy or w/e's in between.
Unfortunately no one has done glossy like back in the early 1440p days with the eBay variants of LG panels or Mac monitors. The anti-glare coating on this monitor is not aggressive, but it's not a clear black reflection
Lastly the 2nd gen QD-OLEDs are going to be Double QHD 49" or w/e the current 32:9 size is. Like Neo G9 but less curvature
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Several people are mentioning burn in risks. My question is how "quickly" are we talking about? Or does it "add up" over time if same static images are in same place but periodically instead of a single instance.
I use my current 34" UW for both personal and work. My job is mostly web-based apps etc but lot of items on these apps are static like tabs, logo etc etc.
Are we talking you leave a static image/text in one place for a few hours a day boom, burn in?
Normally when I'm not using the computer, monitor goes to sleep in 5-10 minutes and when I AM using it, I'm constant switching windows/apps etc etc. Reading all these comments makes it sound like you leave something static for a few hours and you're screwed.
Second, how "bad" or fuzzy is the text? Again my job is mostly looking at text based information. Is it really that bad?