* even for non-gaming uses, high refresh rates are comfortable, IMO. 120hz or higher is fine. Going higher has diminishing returns.
* OLED panels are desirable.
* if you're making a multi-monitor setup, avoid introducing displays that require different levels of scaling. You'll avoid headaches, though KDE improved that drastically in recent years.
I love being able to plug a single cable into the laptop and everything work, and not have a bulky docking station on my desk.
* 40 inch 21:9 aspect ratio. 34 is too small and 43 and above are too big
* QHD i.e. 3440 X 1440 resolution - why? Because it renders the programming fonts perfectly - many will complain about pixelation but for me it just seems perfect. This translates to a PPI of approx. 93 which is the same as for a 24 inch FHD monitor. Scaling spoils it for me
* Curve - not too less nor too aggressive - LG OLED is 800R which is way too much - on the other hand 2300R is too less - I think 1800 is ideal
* 60 Hz or more refresh rate
* Accurate color reproduction
* Matte finish / antiglare
Sadly, a curved monitor with the above specs does not exist. The only one as I mentioned is the LG OLED which has a far too aggressive a curve. There are some lesser known brands which come as flat which I currently use but I wish there was one that met all of the above.
But since you asked what I optimize for... I'm cheap, and tend to opt for inexpensive, no-frills, but reliable 4K monitors. I have several Philips 278E 27-inch 4K monitors. I don't see these on Amazon any more, so maybe this model has been discontinued, but they ran about $250 USD or so. I use a couple on my main workstation for coding, my wife has a couple (that are secondary to an Apple Studio Display), and I have a floating one for the workbench. I find this model to be a sweet spot for my needs. They aren't as beautiful as an Apple display, but they're sufficient.
Potential cons include no camera (I have a separate camera on top, although it sometimes obscures some of the display due to narrow bezels), lousy speakers (I use headsets), and they seem oddly sensitive to electrical fields in the environment (for example, they'll turn off momentarily if I static shock myself on something nearby).
Running on Mac though, if Linux or windows the choices might be different.
I hate monitor are so bloody expensive
Resolution: as high as possible, screen real estate is probably the most important factor to me. I need space for open editors showing as many lines as possible, many files open side-by-side, sometimes documentation right beside what I'm working on, multiple documents open side-by-side, etc.
Everything else is just parfumerie, refresh rates don't bother me nor extremely high DPI since whenever possible I will cram more resolution instead of using more pixels to display less content in a prettier way.
- 4K or higher.
- 1440p effective resolution or higher.
- 120 hz or higher.
- ~160 dpi or higher. Note that some people here are going to rage about non-integer scaling and they're right. But I'm older with less than 20/20 vision and an Apple Silicon device, so it looks sharp enough to me and I don't have any performance issues under any circumstances.
If you want a more stringent look at monitor's, check out Niki Tonsky's posts: https://tonsky.me/blog/monitors/
Things going for 150-200 is old tech. Things in the $500+ is fomo new tech.
Exactly 350-400 is the correct price for a balance of new and legacy tech (best value).
It’s the only way to not get screwed on something that takes up real estate, hard to resell/ship.
This is a niche coding monitor I’m considering: https://www.amazon.com/BenQ-RD280U-Programming-Fine-Coated-E...
* resolution (I am fine with >=1440p)
* USB-C or Thunderbolt with sufficient power to charge notebooks, so you only need to connect one cable to your notebook
* at least 4 USB ports (so keyboard, mouse, camera, speakerphone can be connected to monitor and it acts as a switch when using more than one notebooks)
* viewing angle / display type (image should look the same no matter which angle - but shouldn't be a problem in the price range of monitors that fulfill the previous points)
I have it on a VESA mount. I love it, I typically use two screens anyway and now I get a seamless screen without bezels and half the cables I'd otherwise need.
It’s always fun trying to screen share. You can only share windows, otherwise people will see the entire universe.
I use QD-OLED because I am also gaming, but I don't see a reason to go that way if it's only for work, modern IPS is perfectly fine and at least every now and then you won't end up stuck for minutes waiting for OLED care to finish
Integrated webcam and speakers are a near-must.
High refresh is a nice to have.
- matte surface
- effective* vertical res >= 1200 px (*: meaning that, for instance, 1440 with 2.0 scaling counts as 720 px only).
- ability to rotate (not a must, but nice to have).
OLED and HDR are nice, but I don't do anything at work that requires them, and burn-in is still a concern.
I have a 165hz screen at home and don't notice much when coding.