Read more.VESA DisplayHDR True Black 3840 x 2160px display will be in mass production next month.
Read more.VESA DisplayHDR True Black 3840 x 2160px display will be in mass production next month.
The real question is how well the panel will cope with relatively static images displayed on PC screens...will burn-in be a problem?
In TVs Samsung like us to believe their Qled (quantum dot) technology is better.
I hardly ever use the maximum display brightness on a laptop, even with an LCD, as I'm rarely in direct sunlight and I prefer longer battery life. It may be that burn-in is a negligible issue for that sort of use case. I'll certainly be looking out for reviews that test various brightness levels as 600 nits just doesn't sound necessary for me, particularly with how deep the blacks are.
If it can manage 5000 hours at sensible brightness levels then that'll probably outlast the useful life of the laptop.
But the industry as a whole is still refusing to acknowledge an issue with burn-in/wear-out on OLED displays (probably due to the difficulties it's likely to cause with products already out in the wild) - which means it's unlikely they're going to put out any publiciry proudly proclaiming that it's fixed...
Mass production in Feb probably means no product on the shelves until Q3 - so don't expect the complaints til about August. :|
BH6, BX6 2.0, BE6, BE6-II 2.0, ST6-RAID, BE6-II 2.0 (again), BD7-RAID, BD7II-RAID, IC7-G, IC7 Max3, AB9 QuadGT, IX38 QuadGT. IX58... Oh, b*ll*cks. RIP Abit
CRT versus modern OLED which is likely to suffer burn-in?
Does it have a notch?
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Samsung already works to mitigate burn in on the S8 I have which has an OLED screen. The lock screen graphics for the always on display move up and down by a pixel at a time. Hardly noticable and I've never caught it in motion but the effect is defintiely there and it's clear what it's for. I had a friend who was using an S7 as a sat nav for long distance driving and had quite significant screen burn to the point where I gave him an LCD screen phone to use for sat nav work. Perhaps there is a simple algorithm that could be used when the same data is displayed on the same pixels for a certain duration that the entire image is moved a pixel one way or the other. Doubtful people would notice and it might not solve all issues but it might help.
Want this badly, but When? Also, im waiting for Intel to release 10th Gen procs. I hope I live long enough to be able to see both
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