Of course, by 'screen burn' I mean image persistence that you'd liken to screen burn, but can be removed by a bit of rigorous pixel exercise.
I have a 19" Viewsonic that's a little over three years old and it seems to be suffering more these days.
Printable View
Of course, by 'screen burn' I mean image persistence that you'd liken to screen burn, but can be removed by a bit of rigorous pixel exercise.
I have a 19" Viewsonic that's a little over three years old and it seems to be suffering more these days.
I thought this only happened on glass screens. My 2 year old plasma is showing a tiny bit of burn-in (the motion sensor on Halo games lol) but my monitor upstairs is fine.