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翻訳の問題を報告
odds are its fine
On a new monitor its good to do a break-in or burn-in test.
Such as YouTube > 4K RGB Test Video (once it loads up quickly set the video to loop)
Have your monitor set to one the brighter and more color vibrant presets before loading the video. The video can make you dizzy or hurt your eyes a bit if you actually watch it. It's for Display tests only. Once video loads and you've set to loop it, its best to leave the room. If you must remain in the room cover the screen. Let it run for about an hour.
In future a good way to ensure it's not just a simple GPU related issue is to enter the BIOS on PC startup, as this won't use your GPU beyond the basic 2D Clocks used for DOS/CMD mode, and won't have loaded any GPU Driver yet.
In general I would only replace hardware that actually has an issue. Not hardware that had one weird thing happen one time and it doesn't reoccur and you don't have any other issues and everything seems fine. It doesn't necessarily imply your monitor is more defective or more prone to failure. If you just can't help yourself and you need the illusion of perfection then go on ahead. Otherwise you might give it a bit of time to see if there's any persistent issue or not.
Chances are it was a short term issue or either an issue with how the GPU was displaying; such as visual corruption, or simply a "stuck" pixel. A replacement will not be guaranteed to last any longer, or be free of defect, in fact, it could end up worse. Then what?
That is one of the up-sides to using something like Amazon, as they will almost always accept a return.
One reason I always use an RGB test video loop on new displays, is to give all the pixels a good test. As some places would refuse to accept a product return after 15-30 days depending on the store/retailer and their policy. Especially if you don't want to pay that extra $ to have a warranty through the store. But for things like Displays and Laptops, this can be a good idea to have; because the Brand Maker will not cover things like dead pixels unless it's beyond a certain amount and some brands would state that anything below 5+ dead pixels is something they would refuse to accept as a warranty based return.
with one thats worse off .