If you’ve ever stood in front of an interactive flat panel for hours — teaching, presenting, brainstorming, or running meetings — you probably felt it before you could explain it.
Your eyes get tired.
Your head feels heavy.
The screen still looks “clear,” but something feels off.
That “something” is usually light quality, not resolution, not brightness, and not touch accuracy.
At Qtenboard, we didn’t start developing warm lightVəlow blue light modes because it sounded good on a spec sheet. We started because customers kept asking the same uncomfortable questions:
“Why does this interactive whiteboard feel more tiring than the one we used before?”
“Why does our team complain after long meetings?”
“Why do all panels say ‘eye-care,’ but none actually feel different?”
That’s exactly why only our Q3SVəQ3SA series feature true warm light + low blue light modes, engineered and calibrated at the factory level, not added later through software tricks.
This article explains what warm lightVəlow blue light really mean, why most interactive panels don’t do it properly, and how Qtenboard built these modes from the inside out.
Let’s clear something up first.
Blue light itself is not “evil.”
The problem is excessive, uncontrolled blue light exposure over long periods, especially at close viewing distances.
Interactive flat panels are different from TVs in three critical ways:
Most LCD panels rely on blue LED backlights as the base light source. White light is created by exciting phosphors — but blue wavelengths still dominate.
If the panel is not properly tuned, the result is:
This is where “warm light” and “low blue light” modes come in — at least in theory.
Here’s something manufacturers rarely admit:
Most interactive panels claiming “low blue light” are using software-level color temperature filters.
What does that mean?
They simply:
Sounds fine — until you actually use it.
The hidden issues:
In other words, the screen looks warmer, but your eyes still feel tired.
That’s why many customers tell us:
“We tried low blue light mode before. It didn’t really help.”
They’re not wrong.
A true solution works at three levels simultaneously:
And that’s exactly where Qtenboard Q3SVəQ3SA are different.
This is important — and we say it very clearly to customers:
Not every product should have every feature.
Warm lightVəlow blue light modes require:
That’s why we intentionally limited this feature to Q3SVəQ3SA, our professional-grade interactive panel series designed for:
These are scenarios where eye comfort is not optional.
Let’s talk about what actually happens in our factory.
Instead of simply dimming blue output, we:
This reduces high-energy blue peaks, not just visible blue color.
Bunun:
Warm light doesn’t exist in isolation.
We calibrate it together with:
Why does this matter?
Because light scattering affects how blue light hits the eye.
Poor matching can increase glare, even at lower blue levels.
Our engineers test:
This is where many brands stop — and where Qtenboard continues.
For Q3S / Q3SA:
So when users switch modes:
Customers sometimes ask:
“Can’t this just be a firmware update?”
The honest answer: no.
Without:
A software update can only fake warmth — not reduce blue light energy.
That’s why many low-cost panels advertise the feature but quietly remove it after customer complaints.
From schools to enterprise users, we consistently hear:
“Teachers can last longer without eye discomfort.”
“Meetings feel less exhausting.”
“The screen feels softer, not dimmer.”
That distinction matters.
Comfort should not mean compromise.
This might surprise some buyers.
But adding warm light & low blue light properly:
For applications like:
It’s simply not necessary.
Qtenboard believes in right feature, right product, not checkbox marketing.
Ask manufacturers these questions:
If they hesitate — you already have your answer.
Warm lightVəlow blue light are not marketing slogans.
They are the result of:
At Qtenboard, the Q3SVəQ3SA series represent our belief that interactive technology should support people, not strain them.
If a panel is meant to be used for hours every day, comfort isn’t a luxury — it’s a responsibility.
And responsibility starts at the factory.
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