#14,861 in Electronics
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Reddit mentions of ASUS PA248Q 24" ProArt Professional 1920x1200 IPS HDMI Eye Care Monitor,Black

Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 3

We found 3 Reddit mentions of ASUS PA248Q 24" ProArt Professional 1920x1200 IPS HDMI Eye Care Monitor,Black. Here are the top ones.

ASUS PA248Q 24
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    Features:
  • Professional-grade color fidelity with pre-calibrated ∆E <5 for industry-leading color accuracy
  • ASUS EyeCare technology with Flicker free for less Eye fatigue; Ergonomically-designed stand with Tilt,Swivel,Pivot,Height adjustment plus wall-mount capability for comfortable viewing position
  • True, precise colors on a 100% sRGB, 16:10 aspect ratio, 1920 x 1200 optimal A+ IPS panel
  • The world's first monitor with four USB 3.0 ports for 10X faster transfer. Extensive connectivity with HDMI, D-Sub, DisplayPort, DVI-D, USB 3.0 x4.
  • ASUS-exclusive innovations like QuickFit, Splendid and 5-Way navigation key for enhanced productivity
Specs:
ColorBlack
Height16.39 Inches
Length21.94 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateMay 2016
Size24.1-Inch
Weight20 Pounds
Width9.25 Inches

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Found 3 comments on ASUS PA248Q 24" ProArt Professional 1920x1200 IPS HDMI Eye Care Monitor,Black:

u/leandroc76 · 3 pointsr/buildapcvideoediting

You don't need a gaming monitor for video editing. You need accurate color reproduction. Your monitor only produces 82% of the RGB spectrum. That's HORRIBLE for video editing and color correction! I recommend the following:

Dell P2715Q 27"

ASUS PA248Q 24" ProArt

BenQ 27" 2560x1440 QHD IPS Designer Monitor (PD2700Q)

The MORE cores you have the MORE RAM you'll need to be able to USE those cores effectively. You DON'T want the CPU to address less than 2 GB's per core. It will end up negating the reason you even have all those cores. Build for the amount of RAM you can afford. The sweet spot is 4GB's per core. So if you have 12 cores (6 physical + 6 threaded) you'll need 12 x 4GB's. 48 GB's would be your MINIMUM.

ANY system built with the proper balance of RAM, CPU and Storage bandwidth can handle proxied 6.5k footage, let alone 4k compressed footage. The CPU and GPU DOES NOT MATTER as long as the CPU has enough RAM to address, and the GPU has enough stream processors for accelerating effects. That inlcudes CUDA cores. That means... just about ANY CPU and GPU combo from the last 4 years is capable... so as long as you have enough RAM and Fast storage you will be fine. Stop listening to gamers for advice. Listen to editors who know the difference. Many editors here MAKE MONEY for a living with rigs that allow them to do their JOB.

YOU WANT FAST STORAGE!!! Don't put your OS on the fast storage. It's not needed. Please see the wiki for more info.

u/bLaZeThEkRaZe · 2 pointsr/Monitors

There is the 27" Asus PA279Q that is the most ideal for color accuracy but is over the budget you mentioned at $504.62. The 24" Asus 'Pro Art' PA248Q is right in your ball park on price if you have Amazon Prime.

u/Rylopos · 1 pointr/AlternativeAmazonVGF

Dell, Asus, BenQ, LG, and Samsung all seem to be good brands for monitors. You should be able to find something good for $400-$500. If you're interested in 16:10 you're probably looking at a max resolution of 1920x1200 up to 26 inches in that price range. At 16:9 you can find resolutions up to 4K in a similar size. Bump the resolution down to 1440p and you could increase the size.

Here's some decent ones. I'm no expert so definitely look through the reviews for any issues.

Asus 1920x1200

Samsung 32" 2560x1440

Samsung 28" 4K