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by slantyyz
2378 days ago
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I'm of the view is that if it's an Apple monitor, there's probably nothing you need to do to it other than plug it in and power it on. The color calibration out of the box will probably be near perfect, and all the controls will make perfect sense (which can't be said of all monitor makers). Unless there's a huge warning sticker on the plastic that usually comes over the screen, I wouldn't even think that there was special care required. Of course, that's assuming I'm setting up the monitor myself. In an office environment, it might not be set up by the actual user, and the user might not be given the manual or know about any special care requirements. |
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