That's not an issue with OLED, that's an issue with manufacturers (especially Samsung) bumping the contrast too high making the colors oversaturated to make the displays seem better for people know no better. Properly calibrated OLEDs don't have this issue.
As a graphics design student I prefer IPS. It's more colour accurate. Allows me to enjoy the colours just like the creator wanted. Same reason I also prefer studio headphones. I don't like headphones with a biased sound signature.
@@SuperKREPSINIS amoled can be colour accurate out the box. But after sometimes.. we need callibration as un uniform pixel burn in.. for example maybe we used blue more than red or green..etc so our white balance will off into warm colour. Throwing accuracy off.. out the box most of amoled screen use saturated colour profile.. as most people like colour that pop up for them.. if u use correct profile..it can be accurated if profile calibrated well.
@@RisingLava tbh, LG's IPS are more color accurate than my Samsung AMOLED, this is a phone display comparison btw, Samsung has tend to oversaturate their AMOLED so its not "true" anymore, but it does look good, not my cup of tea tho.
IPS doesn't suffer from burn in like AMOLED. I learned that the hard way, by using my phone as a dedicated GPS in my car. I switched to Xperia Z3+ with IPS and I couldn't be happier :-)
*spots breaking Benjamin on right device at **0:21* you sir have great taste in music. First Starset (saw one of their videos playing in the background of a blue sky video) and now Breaking Benjamin.
I had a couple friends asking me about the difference between AMOLED and IPS after I mentioned how superior (imo) amoled is for a viewing experience since they were looking into phones and this actually cleared up some facts for me. Thanks!
I'm actually looking forward to that Aerocool P7 C1 review. This intro says it features a tempered glass side panel, but the Aerocool website says it has a "large acrylic side window". Oh never mind, at the bottom, it says that the tempered glass side panel is sold separately. Their site also says it has 7 LED lighting colors in one description and 8 in another. The case definitely looks really cool! Looks like it has a lot of options for cooling as well. Can't wait to see how cable management looks.
It's not Burn-in, it is blue led degradation because it has the shortest lifespan. So, sooner or later each and every oled screen will deteriorate, the colors will shift, and at least the status bar icons will be visible on grey backgrounds. And you can't fix it, because that's just not possible for obvious reasons. Now, this is the reason I strictly avoid amoled screens. Yes, my options are not that much, but still there are manufactures who produce phones with overall good performance but use IPS screens instead of amoled. Examples are Motorola, Nokia.
@@bestopinion9257 blue led deterioration is already starting to get visible in 0.5 years of daily usage. So, talking of complete degradation, it depends on what is the acceptable level for you. Maybe you can live with almost no blue on screen. In this case, it can serve you maybe 10+ years.
To put it simply, the analogue can be simplified like the difference between a CNC machining process verse a 3D Printing process. IPS/TN and all other LCD technology is a *subtractive* process. Whereas AMOLED and all similar organic LED technologies are an *Additive* process at colour reproduction. This relates to CNC and 3d printing because CNC is also a subtractive process and 3D printing is an additive process. They both have their cons, for example 3D printing is mostly dominated with plastic and this means less durable constructions whereas with metal CNC cuts your works are much more robust and durable and thus last longer. AMOLED adds more light to produce colour and brightness but LCD subtracts parts of light with filters and also polarizers to block an always on backlight.
Thanks. This was the explanation I needed. Synthesizer guy, here. So I already understand subtractive vs additive processes quite well (as in additive synthesis vs subtractive synthesis).
There are so much better tech than just IPS. QLED (VA) from Samsung is better, IPS for LG on G6 is also very good. 384 Zones for LED also help. In the end its which technology can do HDR best.
VA has its own issues. Poor viewing angles, pixel smearing, and black crush. It's nice in a TV screen, (if you don't mind black detail getting wrecked), but terrible for content creation.
"Black Detail getting wrecked?" So basically what you're saying is, a lesser contrast ratio is superior because it makes dark things easier to see. Ok. Fine.
Science Studio I guess not released in the US. I had to import the case from the U.K. as it mostly sold in Europe. I paid $150 $44 of that was shipping.
I hate AMOLED. Sure, it's pretty, but I don't want permanent and highly visible damage done to the screen after only a few month of use, especially considering how much phones with AMOLED screens usually cost. My Blackberry PRIV got some nasty burn in, as did my brother's Galaxy S3 and S5. Never again.
Nikola Popovic it's not luck. I (like my brother) use my phone a lot. It's my main device for web browsing, entertainment (when away from home) and just about everything. Because I use it a lot, things like this happen sooner rather than later.
Mbuuqw Plays all that really does is essentially damage the rest of the screen so it's all as bad as the burnt in part. Shouldn't have to do that with a $600 phone.
The color saturation and the burning display over time are what keeps me from liking AMOLED displays, once those problems are solved I'll switch to them because of the power saving features.
3 years using amoled phone, only notice slight discoloration on the top part of the display(on very low brightness. with moderate brightness i can't even notice it)
Fun fact - retina is actually a mathematical formula used by apple for the implementation of ppi , resolution etc , it is not something hardware but affects the use of hardware for screen accordingly
Retina is just Apple's marketing term for that formula which implies that the pixel density is so small that at normal viewing distances the average human eye stops being able to discern the pixels, so yes and no. It is in part hardware as Retina displays are all high-DPI.
1) Brightness suffers as you increase refresh rate, as you have to increase the switching frequency of the pixels, which decreases the average current available to put through each pixel (as it spends more time switching, and less time being bright). OLEDs already have a problem with being bright. 2) Sure, you could get past #1, but it'd be hella expensive. 3) the new UA-cam is so fucking white now it hurts my eyes 4) OLEDs don't have all that great of a response time 5) Another added cost and delay to response time is the processing delay required for anti-burn in measures.
I prefer IPS because I think a good IPS panel can have a contrast ratio almost as good as OLED/ AMOLED and it isn't oversaturated. Also, I don't care abut viewing angles unless they are really bad.
Yes oled often tend to be oversaturated. However on your second point about how ips can come close to oled in terms of contrast ratio is absolute nonsense
Hey Greg, do you think you could do more of these crash course vids? I'm an electrical engineering student and I live for this kind of shit. Great vid!
Hello Science Studio, I was wondering if you could tell me where you got the mat on your desk in the video with all the images & info about PC parts? I'd like to get something like too. :)
Apple's retina displays especially those in the 2016 macbook pros have really deep blacks to the point that you'd have to squint really hard to spot the backlight leakage. Sure they're not amoled black, but considering they're ips, I'd say there's still a lot more potential for the tech.
I really want to see your review of that case from the beginning. It looks like a super efficient Corsair 780T in the ATX size instead of Full size. I'm currently breaking down my watercooled 780T build for the 570X. I would love to see corsair release a varient just like the one you're reviewing.
@Elmahdi Ettaleb no burn-in after all,new amoled technologies can't burn easily on small devices,but oled TV's easily burn so let's try QLED for burnless life 😁
I have both AMOLED and IPS cell phones and I find the AMOLED ones are softer on the eyes. The warmer color temperature that OLED panels have creates a much better viewing experience in dim light such as reading in your room at night. An AMOLED display and a blue light filter go a long way in making the screen easier on your eyes.
I've always been curious (perhaps you've answered this and I just didn't know lol), but what are you majoring in? I'm assuming it's a subject in science?
Thaank you for the video sir......im a fan of amoled...m using lenovo p2 with an amoled screen...being an amoled fan cuts off many great options like mi5 ,lenovo z2 plus........!!
Can you make a video on how to make a quieter pc? My pc gets extremely loud and it sounds like I'm on a plane when I play intense games. I've been looking to get a new case and improve the airflow greatly
Great video!! Just curious, but what about Samsung's PLS displays like they use on laptops? I thought they were somewhere between IPS and OLED, but I don't know why or anything about the tech they use. Would be awesome to see a video on them, Thanks!
Can you do this video on the lgg6 explaining how they use a lcd screen and can achieve colors that rival a amoled phone. It can't get those inky blacks but it certainly gets brighter and colors are just as or if not more vivid. Also how does lg implementation of "always on display" work compared to Samsung on the s8. And how did lg achieve hdr 10/Dolby vision?.
DAVID DOUILLET Yes, I tasted it but noticed it getting yellowish or greenish after 1 year of using. It aged pretty bad and eventually came back to IPS.
That was the case with the early models, the technology wasn't that optimized, but the later models from Samsung (the best manufacturer with best R&D) has proven superior in every aspect to IPS even in long terms. That being said the burn-in and the eventual fading in the long run (especially for BLUE pixels) is still a ting and only time and R&D will eventually adresse all the quirks.
Gs4, note 4, and s7 all got UA-cam “”burned in”” in under 6 months each with mid brightness and 2-4hrs screen on per day, many 1-3 video sessions. Fucking dreading that all flagships barring Sony’s use AMOLED now.
Gotta agree! I recently got a Galaxy S6, and it has an amoled screen. It's majestic. Also, a few months ago, we got an Asus monitor, IPS. It's beautiful!
Do all of the AMOLED's suffer from "burn-in"? For me that would be a major negative since that would seem to eventually defeat the purpose of of the purported infinite contrast.
This will get a little technical ksnshdkensbjewknhdodkenshxianbwhsjdnd and this is Science Studio thanks for learning with us
can i copy paste this comment XD
Yeah, pretty much :D
Aye i got a heart and a ton of likes
Jack Ryan Please provide insight as to how I could have made Inter-Plane-Switching technology "engaging."
tits?
Imagine playing a dark horror game on an OLED display, literally pitch black xD
That's a issue I have with Oled, dark scenes are just way to dark you can't see anything.
That's not an issue with OLED, that's an issue with manufacturers (especially Samsung) bumping the contrast too high making the colors oversaturated to make the displays seem better for people know no better. Properly calibrated OLEDs don't have this issue.
Zoomat4 that's an issue with you not setting it properly,blacks shold be invisible,and whites are brighter than lcd
fair DV but by changing the adaptive display to "basic" samsungs displays actually become very good and accurate
But that black crush. Ur losing details with AMOLED in dark scenes
Savage studio dropping them facts!
At least our phones don't use tn panels
Back then though lol
Old phone use DSTN which is worse than TFT TN
Cheap Chinese phones entered the chat
As a graphics design student I prefer IPS. It's more colour accurate. Allows me to enjoy the colours just like the creator wanted. Same reason I also prefer studio headphones. I don't like headphones with a biased sound signature.
Amoled for media consumtion, ips for media creation. Profesional graphics designers use only ips, no other screen is good for that.
@@SuperKREPSINIS amoled can be colour accurate out the box. But after sometimes.. we need callibration as un uniform pixel burn in.. for example maybe we used blue more than red or green..etc so our white balance will off into warm colour. Throwing accuracy off.. out the box most of amoled screen use saturated colour profile.. as most people like colour that pop up for them.. if u use correct profile..it can be accurated if profile calibrated well.
@@SyrFlora i use flat colours profile for my laptop and phone
I thought AMOLED had the true colors
@@RisingLava tbh, LG's IPS are more color accurate than my Samsung AMOLED, this is a phone display comparison btw, Samsung has tend to oversaturate their AMOLED so its not "true" anymore, but it does look good, not my cup of tea tho.
IPS doesn't suffer from burn in like AMOLED. I learned that the hard way, by using my phone as a dedicated GPS in my car. I switched to Xperia Z3+ with IPS and I couldn't be happier :-)
Can't wait for that case review.
*spots breaking Benjamin on right device at **0:21* you sir have great taste in music. First Starset (saw one of their videos playing in the background of a blue sky video) and now Breaking Benjamin.
Fkin love me some BB.
take me back to high school, friends!
Science Studio I have awesome parents, so I was practically raised on music like Breaking Benjamin.
Haha I got into StarSet because of this channel
And you don't notice the queens of the stone age post? They're much better than breaking benjamin at making good rock imo.
I had a couple friends asking me about the difference between AMOLED and IPS after I mentioned how superior (imo) amoled is for a viewing experience since they were looking into phones and this actually cleared up some facts for me. Thanks!
I'm actually looking forward to that Aerocool P7 C1 review. This intro says it features a tempered glass side panel, but the Aerocool website says it has a "large acrylic side window". Oh never mind, at the bottom, it says that the tempered glass side panel is sold separately. Their site also says it has 7 LED lighting colors in one description and 8 in another. The case definitely looks really cool! Looks like it has a lot of options for cooling as well. Can't wait to see how cable management looks.
"Pee-O-LED" Has to be about the best thing I've seen in one of your videos, and actually made me spit water.
Yes! Another reason to watch this channel...PC hardware and random scientific info about different types of hardware and technologies.
Glad you enjoyed it!
It's not Burn-in, it is blue led degradation because it has the shortest lifespan. So, sooner or later each and every oled screen will deteriorate, the colors will shift, and at least the status bar icons will be visible on grey backgrounds. And you can't fix it, because that's just not possible for obvious reasons. Now, this is the reason I strictly avoid amoled screens. Yes, my options are not that much, but still there are manufactures who produce phones with overall good performance but use IPS screens instead of amoled. Examples are Motorola, Nokia.
How many years until amoled slowly dies?
@@bestopinion9257 blue led deterioration is already starting to get visible in 0.5 years of daily usage. So, talking of complete degradation, it depends on what is the acceptable level for you. Maybe you can live with almost no blue on screen. In this case, it can serve you maybe 10+ years.
greg i was gonna sleep
Finally a youtuber that speaks english! Thanks for the information!😇
lol
Watching this on an amoled display :D
To put it simply, the analogue can be simplified like the difference between a CNC machining process verse a 3D Printing process.
IPS/TN and all other LCD technology is a *subtractive* process. Whereas AMOLED and all similar organic LED technologies are an *Additive* process at colour reproduction.
This relates to CNC and 3d printing because CNC is also a subtractive process and 3D printing is an additive process. They both have their cons, for example 3D printing is mostly dominated with plastic and this means less durable constructions whereas with metal CNC cuts your works are much more robust and durable and thus last longer. AMOLED adds more light to produce colour and brightness but LCD subtracts parts of light with filters and also polarizers to block an always on backlight.
Thanks. This was the explanation I needed. Synthesizer guy, here. So I already understand subtractive vs additive processes quite well (as in additive synthesis vs subtractive synthesis).
6:15 that's why I've seen some phones with the keyboard marked on the screen
*Great comparative technical rundown!*
And very impartial and objective presentation, if I might add! 👍
Great work! Thanks for all the info!
what's different about samsungs "Super"amoled
the word super sells more samsungs
Accurate haha
Whereas the word "explosive" amoled would be the opposite ;P
huh
It is fucking SUPER!!!!!
Looking forward for that Aerocool case review, got my eyes on it.
This helped out a lot. Thanks.
There are so much better tech than just IPS. QLED (VA) from Samsung is better, IPS for LG on G6 is also very good. 384 Zones for LED also help. In the end its which technology can do HDR best.
VA has its own issues. Poor viewing angles, pixel smearing, and black crush. It's nice in a TV screen, (if you don't mind black detail getting wrecked), but terrible for content creation.
"Black Detail getting wrecked?" So basically what you're saying is, a lesser contrast ratio is superior because it makes dark things easier to see. Ok. Fine.
smokeydops i mean it may sound stupid but it's true, with oled and va panels dark things just blur together.
Orjon Zaganjori lg v30 has true oled which is said to be better than samsung amoled O.o
I'm stating known issues with VA. Losing black detail is kinda important when it comes to HDR tho.
Can you also make a review between the LG V30 POLED vs the Samsung AMOLED displays. See which is better?
I think amoled is best
Greg, great video!!
I still don't like the over saturating of OLED screens.
not saturated. accurate colors. IPS has glowing, overly bright and saturated colors. not oled. you're getting it completely backwards
And OLED's screen burn problem
@@vladg5216 are you stupid or just joking?
@@vladg5216 No, she is right. OLED is overly bright.
How much is the case you featured during the beginning. I checked their website and couldn't find anything
Austin Kleinfelt Not released yet. Will discuss in the review.
Science Studio I guess not released in the US. I had to import the case from the U.K. as it mostly sold in Europe. I paid $150 $44 of that was shipping.
I build it when ryzen first released.
Great video, well explained!
I hate AMOLED. Sure, it's pretty, but I don't want permanent and highly visible damage done to the screen after only a few month of use, especially considering how much phones with AMOLED screens usually cost. My Blackberry PRIV got some nasty burn in, as did my brother's Galaxy S3 and S5. Never again.
TimmyOz you were pretty unlucky
Nikola Popovic it's not luck. I (like my brother) use my phone a lot. It's my main device for web browsing, entertainment (when away from home) and just about everything. Because I use it a lot, things like this happen sooner rather than later.
Mbuuqw Plays all that really does is essentially damage the rest of the screen so it's all as bad as the burnt in part. Shouldn't have to do that with a $600 phone.
TimmyOz I still have my note 4, no issues with burn in. Not to say it can't or wont happen, but it may be exaggerated with newer tech.
Black Dream my brother's Galaxy S3 got terrible burn-in after like a year, it's just a drawback of OLED technology.
The color saturation and the burning display over time are what keeps me from liking AMOLED displays, once those problems are solved I'll switch to them because of the power saving features.
3 years using amoled phone, only notice slight discoloration on the top part of the display(on very low brightness. with moderate brightness i can't even notice it)
please do a video comparing LCD, OLED and micro LCD.
good video dude
This is why I subbed to this channel. Exactly this type of videos
Yaroslav V. Glad you enjoyed it!
Fun fact - retina is actually a mathematical formula used by apple for the implementation of ppi , resolution etc , it is not something hardware but affects the use of hardware for screen accordingly
Nirap Singh No but all Retina displays use the same IPS technology to which I was referring.
Retina is just Apple's marketing term for that formula which implies that the pixel density is so small that at normal viewing distances the average human eye stops being able to discern the pixels, so yes and no. It is in part hardware as Retina displays are all high-DPI.
Tbh i actually don't care and i wouldn't even google those things but i love watching this type of videos on this channel. Keep it up Greg
Why are 144hz oled gaming displays not readily available?
^^^^^^^^ DO A VIDEO ON THIS
InSight Show Not very educated on the topic but it might have something to do with response times,Just a guess.
InSight Show probbly because 144hz is gamer oriented...tn costs 300 and oled might cost 500, what would you buy? Not a fact, just a theory of mine.
InSight Show it will cost a lot and response time issue... Not an expert on this subject but this is probably correct...
1) Brightness suffers as you increase refresh rate, as you have to increase the switching frequency of the pixels, which decreases the average current available to put through each pixel (as it spends more time switching, and less time being bright). OLEDs already have a problem with being bright.
2) Sure, you could get past #1, but it'd be hella expensive.
3) the new UA-cam is so fucking white now it hurts my eyes
4) OLEDs don't have all that great of a response time
5) Another added cost and delay to response time is the processing delay required for anti-burn in measures.
5:55 that's not how you graph. Luminance is an independent (controllable) variable and should go on the x axis instead.
This is the content I subbed for!
I prefer IPS because I think a good IPS panel can have a contrast ratio almost as good as OLED/ AMOLED and it isn't oversaturated. Also, I don't care abut viewing angles unless they are really bad.
JWproductions yea the display we find in sony phones are good though
Yes oled often tend to be oversaturated. However on your second point about how ips can come close to oled in terms of contrast ratio is absolute nonsense
Hey Greg, do you think you could do more of these crash course vids? I'm an electrical engineering student and I live for this kind of shit. Great vid!
how about amoled burn? you didn't mention.
I fuckin love you, finally someone with a fu king brain instead of just telling us which is better shows us real life examples thank you so much!!
Download link for the awesome wallpaper you used on the Mi6/OP?
Gabriel Butoeru .
.
I never knew screens were so complicated.
What smartwatch r u wearing ?
What about VA panels? Besides their lower viewing angles I much prefer the colors on VA than IPS, but I can work with either.
Hello Science Studio, I was wondering if you could tell me where you got the mat on your desk in the video with all the images & info about PC parts? I'd like to get something like too. :)
Good video. Wish you had done more about televisions and the trade offs/tech for whole-room displays.
Thank goodness found an English speaking site. Anything phone related on YT is mostly in Hindi despite using English titles and description.
savage studio is my favorite studio damn lmao
Do you have an article about IPS?
Thank you so much for this video
Where can I get that mountain background?
Should I get the Doogee Mix with a 720p amoled screen or the Maze alpha with a 1080p IPS screen?
Apple's retina displays especially those in the 2016 macbook pros have really deep blacks to the point that you'd have to squint really hard to spot the backlight leakage. Sure they're not amoled black, but considering they're ips, I'd say there's still a lot more potential for the tech.
AMOLED suitable for dinamic image (entertainment etc.). IPS more suitable for productivity (reading, typing, editing, etc.)
I really want to see your review of that case from the beginning. It looks like a super efficient Corsair 780T in the ATX size instead of Full size. I'm currently breaking down my watercooled 780T build for the 570X. I would love to see corsair release a varient just like the one you're reviewing.
I literally can't tell the difference no matter how much I try to compare them side-by-side.
OLEDs age too fast! This is the reason you don't see OLED in most of the laptop!
@Elmahdi Ettaleb no burn-in after all,new amoled technologies can't burn easily on small devices,but oled TV's easily burn so let's try QLED for burnless life 😁
So you tellin me not to buy a Super Amoled phone?
@@cenanmehmet yes. My computer monitor is QLED quantum dot. Imo it's much better than AMOLED and regular LCD
@@lordzeuscannon6400 oled laptops for power users,qleds are improved lcd panels,Qleds for normal users
@@cenanmehmet actually, it's the opposite. QLED has a wider range of colors. In fact, 1 BILLION. QLED is used when accuracy is most important
Awesome video, thanks
Glad you enjoyed it!
Even I understood the technical aspects - Thank you =P
Which one is considered to be easier on the eyes? Or is that more of a matter of setting brightness levels and blue light filters?
Allen Schneider LCD is known to be a little easier on the eyes
We want more! Thanks Greg. Great content!
My monitor is IPS and my tv is AMOLED, they look almost the same to me
Could you do a video covering good cases to learn watercooling in
Ty for the great video
This video? Nice one :)
Them wallpapers thou! 🔥🔥🔥
What about PLS display technology?
So which is better for desktop monitors?
I prefer IPS for the accurate color reproduction over infinite contrast of AMOLED.
Brandon Wong definitely IPS. You can find IPS gaming monitors with 144+ Hz refresh rate but they're expensive af.
better just get a high end VA panels rng of ips glow is hard for most ppl living outside the usa where u cannot send back ur stuff or anything
AMOLED wins 4 for 4. Imma get a new AMOLED monitor then
Pope Chode well better get to plowing them rice fields
So for phones you prefer oled displays and for TV or Laptop IPS display.
Ok so what do you recommend for a tablet of 11 inches ?
please do a video on amoled vs poled
finally found the english video for this lol
I have both AMOLED and IPS cell phones and I find the AMOLED ones are softer on the eyes. The warmer color temperature that OLED panels have creates a much better viewing experience in dim light such as reading in your room at night. An AMOLED display and a blue light filter go a long way in making the screen easier on your eyes.
I am agree with this.
Seriously? IPS got better brightness dimming compared with oled since the brightness is not constant on each led/pixels.
@@cocobos Yes, it's been 4 years and I'm even more right than I was back then. If you're still promoting LCD you might as well be a caveman.
@@pacattack81 just admit it, oled dimming still worst than IPS
@@cocobos You can dim most OLED screens down to 1 nit. I don't understand what issue you are talking about.
I've always been curious (perhaps you've answered this and I just didn't know lol), but what are you majoring in? I'm assuming it's a subject in science?
Jordan Schultz He's said in the past petroleum engineering. Can't remember which video it was.
which one would last longer or more tor longevity though?
So which one is better for your eyes? And sprains your eyes less?
Nither ips not amoled.
Actually blue light is what actually matters
Finally a video in English about this!
Same case
Thaank you for the video sir......im a fan of amoled...m using lenovo p2 with an amoled screen...being an amoled fan cuts off many great options like mi5 ,lenovo z2 plus........!!
Amoled for media consumtion, ips for media creation. Profesional graphics designers use only ips, no other screen is good for that.
Exactly
The phones aside - love that sweet looking monitor - Greg!
I've got a review of it up on the channel! Only TN, but crazy smooth at 165Hz.
oh! alright. ill check it out - thank you
OMG This guy exposes the amoled display secrets, the results he gets are SHOCKING
Can you make a video on how to make a quieter pc? My pc gets extremely loud and it sounds like I'm on a plane when I play intense games. I've been looking to get a new case and improve the airflow greatly
Great video!! Just curious, but what about Samsung's PLS displays like they use on laptops? I thought they were somewhere between IPS and OLED, but I don't know why or anything about the tech they use. Would be awesome to see a video on them, Thanks!
Is the Galaxy S8 display as hyper-saturated as earlier galaxy phones?
for phone companies an amoled 720x1250 and 1080x2500 ips lcd have the same price ?
Can you do this video on the lgg6 explaining how they use a lcd screen and can achieve colors that rival a amoled phone. It can't get those inky blacks but it certainly gets brighter and colors are just as or if not more vivid. Also how does lg implementation of "always on display" work compared to Samsung on the s8. And how did lg achieve hdr 10/Dolby vision?.
Dark theme sits perfectly with amoled displays. Looks stunning on my phone. For laptops, there's dark theme option in windows 10
Could you do the same type of video on Quantum Dot panel ? (because the 4k 144hz panels are coming and they have IPS Quantum Dot panels)
great information about display thanks .
Hey Science Studio, have you tried a laptop with AMOLED, like the Alienware 13r3?
Zellio2011 They're pretty good, but oversaturated IMO.
Do ips suffer burns too? Like in always on displays?
Fidel Pablo no
Greg Nye the Science Guy
Very informative.
Watching on an Amoled screen, once you taste it you'll never go back to LCD.
DAVID DOUILLET true, amoled masterrace
DAVID DOUILLET Yes, I tasted it but noticed it getting yellowish or greenish after 1 year of using. It aged pretty bad and eventually came back to IPS.
That was the case with the early models, the technology wasn't that optimized, but the later models from Samsung (the best manufacturer with best R&D) has proven superior in every aspect to IPS even in long terms.
That being said the burn-in and the eventual fading in the long run (especially for BLUE pixels) is still a ting and only time and R&D will eventually adresse all the quirks.
Gs4, note 4, and s7 all got UA-cam “”burned in”” in under 6 months each with mid brightness and 2-4hrs screen on per day, many 1-3 video sessions. Fucking dreading that all flagships barring Sony’s use AMOLED now.
Great video, thanks for all the info!! #champion
Gotta agree!
I recently got a Galaxy S6, and it has an amoled screen. It's majestic.
Also, a few months ago, we got an Asus monitor, IPS. It's beautiful!
I have s5 that's has AMOLED too
I literally didn't understand a word 😂 next time talk slow hdjdudjdhhdjend and this is science studio thanks for learning.
..
do you get off on trying to steal likes from people?
Bear Gryllz no Im telling the truth
you copied the top comment..
Bear Gryllz no
u ore smorte
0:20 Breaking Benjamin! \m/
Do all of the AMOLED's suffer from "burn-in"? For me that would be a major negative since that would seem to eventually defeat the purpose of of the purported infinite contrast.
Raben yes