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WIRED Called Our AirGradient Monitor 'Not Recommended' Over a Broken Display
(www.airgradient.com)
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Sure, it's a thing to note. I see these things mentioned in reviews regularly, but it's just "we had a problem with x, but it was covered by the warranty and they sent a replacement."
Reviewing the product as if the broken screen is part of the product is lazy and unprofessional. Not to mention, kind of besides the point for most users who are likely plugging it into a smarthome system so the information is readily accessible from their phone or smartwatch.
Ironically, because of this post I looked at some other reviews (who's screen had zero issues) and they were all positive. Especially about the integrations with other open source projects in the home automation space.
I've looked at adding air quality monitoring to my system, there's a lot of modules available, but unless you want to build them into a Raspberry pi and write your own integrations your choices are pretty limited (and often tied to proprietary, cloud-based, products).
$200 to have all those sensors professionally assembled, with a case and software support for the FOSS ecosystem is pretty good. Even if it didn't have a screen at all.