When we use platforms like Pageorama to create quick, clean web pages, we expect our readers to see exactly what we designed. However, I’ll make a strong affirmative statement: your ability to curate a professional-looking site is a total illusion if you haven't verified the integrity of your display. I firmly believe that "hidden" hardware flaws—like backlight bleed or uneven color reproduction—distort your perception of contrast and layout, leading you to publish pages that look polished to you but messy to everyone else. It is a fundamental mistake to focus on web aesthetics while viewing your work through a hardware "window" that is visually compromised. I’ve started using this online black screen tool to audit my screen’s purity before every new page launch, ensuring my digital output is as clean as the platform promises. Do you think "display auditing" is a necessary skill for web creators, or is worrying about pixel-perfect hardware just a waste of time?