On June 25 2012 20:42 Phayze wrote:
At the time it was still highly regarded. The only issue the 2410T had was that early production rounds of the monitor had back light bleeding. You could circumvent it by buying a monitor with a production date later on (it was posted on the box).
At the time it was still highly regarded. The only issue the 2410T had was that early production rounds of the monitor had back light bleeding. You could circumvent it by buying a monitor with a production date later on (it was posted on the box).
Backlight bleeding is not its problem. Its problem was the reverse ghosting which made it worse than just about any non-VA monitor on the market.
Edit:
Benq XL2420T mostly fixes this problem. Which is why its the much better monitor. I'm not sure who highly regarded the XL2410 but they obviously weren't looking at the Samsung or Asus options on the market.