Monitor tests are usually monolithic. Sure, the author tries to write in a light style, using funny phrases so that the bland reader doesn’t get bored to death, but even then, let’s face it, a monitor test doesn’t tend to be too exciting.
There is a short introduction, then we write a few lines about the box, the accessories, and then we get to the outside. This is roughly 1-, maybe a page and a half. This may be followed by the more interesting part for techies, the description of the features, the test and the personal experience of the author. That's about it.
However, even if not too often, there are products that you can’t write an article about as usual. You guessed it, this article will be like that. There is a simple reason for this, the Philips 275C5QHGSW Ambiglow Plus monitor is made exciting not by the internal image display capabilities but by the exterior. You see in your head, now the motto in it is that it's bullshit, on a monitor the focus is on capabilities, that's interesting, the exterior is only secondary. Anyway, we stare at the screen, mostly in the dark, then we don't see anything else. Who cares what the sole is like, the back of the display?
Well, they thought that way at Philips, too, maybe that's why it occurred to them that this should change. What if they thought about buying our monitor for once because we added something exciting to the look? This is what would be the question I am trying to answer in this article. Whatever the end result, the tutira will be subjective because, as they say, tastes and slaps are very different!
For those who are now thinking about why they should read an article where they only write about plastic cover, I am reassured that on the one hand it will be about the interior and on the other hand that the exterior is the essential does not mean that there is waste inside. .
Come on, turn, and you'll see what I'm grinning about!