Hmm.. I'd think not.
I don't think the manufacturer would be generous enough to accept chassis modified monitors with screw holes..
But again that's just me.
Note, the 3 year warranty only applies when the monitor is not in a residential place(home)..
So basically, they will only honor the 3 year warranty if the monitor is at a business location, and will honor only 1 year if it is at a residential.
This was confirmed through chat with LG.
40"'s ppi is similar to 27" 1440p, which I feel is the sweet spot.
I'm eyeing the 40" version of this, I already cancelled my Phillips order and am waiting for a deal on these..
To people who had both the flat and the curve..
Is the experience that much different?
I'm considering going for the U3415W, and am wondering if it is worth the extra..
We need some more info.
Single GTX 980 won't be able to power 4K at high settings, so if you play intensive games it may be better to go with the XB270HU. But if you play mild games and don't mind lowering settings or resolution, I'd say 4K all the way.
Honestly, I'm also in the same boat- I...
I'm running on a XPS 8700 with a 460W PSU..
So I've decided not to OC it until I upgrade the PSU.
But when reading around, I saw that our card has great OC potential...
But it all depends on your card.. :D
Just curious, does OC'ing the monitor 24/7 cause problems for the board?
I'm considering putting it back to 60Hz when I'm not gaming, but it's kind of a PITA to switch every time I fire up a game.
Hmm, thanks for the review.
I was considering this, but you just confirmed my choice of going with the 21:9...
It has its cons, but I these cons I can live with.
I personally prefer the 21:9,
4K is still a bit too stressing on the GPU and you need at least 40+ to get rid of scaling.
21:9 is amazing from productivity's standpoint, and just has a wow factor.
Why not get the Korean monitors like the Qnix?
They are really good options for the price if in a tight budget, and I think you can grab 2 for your budget.
2560x1440, 27" PLS, overclockable to 120Hz.