Unlike the earlier Dell UltraSharp U2713HM tried out (the bugged me with extreme backlight bleeding) and the Iiyama (including the size of its simply too few pixels) XUB2790HS-B1 I am completely happy with this monitor (almost).
The advantages of the supplied with plenty Kabelage in a simple package monitor:
* Good workmanship
* Height-adjustable
* Pivot function
* Stable base, little Gewackel
* Uniform illumination
* Very stable viewing angle
* No dead pixels
* Very fine resolution (2560x1440 pixels)
* At the sRGB setting very nice, neutral colors (recalibration with a Spyder was hardly necessary)
* Suitable for gaming - at least for the casual gamer like me (and shooters)
* Good antireflective coating
Here the neutral points
* Yes, with a little IPS Glow and minimal backlight bleeding you have to live. That's IPS monitors just like that. Nevertheless, one can also good films with darker scenes look, because you already sits slightly further away due to the size of the monitor. Who feels IPS Glow extremely disturbing, not allowed to buy any IPS monitor.
* Had the frame to be high-gloss? You will never learn it. * Sigh * In relation to Monior but it is narrow enough.
* The design is very stuffy. This point could be just as easily withdraw in the benefits
Negatives:
* The menu is well organized and offers a variety of settings (eg special modes for film, photo, game, etc.). These options will be but hardly exploited since the five control buttons right behind (!) Are attached to the monitor, so you have to play the accordion always blind. Clearly not well solved.
Conclusion: For this price a very good monitor that corresponds to the advertised capacity as all-rounder fully. The botched operation on the rearward buttons are no reason to deduct a full point at least for me. Who often switch between different modes and forth must, but that may put you off.