It's also important to mention that LCD screens might suffer from image retention which is slightly similar to burn in. I owned the XP Innovator 16, the device suffered from this after a year or so as I was able to see a faint view of my CSP UI over at Discord or any other program that has a dark user interface. On a side note I never used the device above 50% brightness and despite that the image retention appeared after spending 10 minutes or so with a still image. Despite such issues I was still capable of making use of the display so I kept the device for about 2 years total.
LCD here. I like my oled samsung tablet, but not everyone who views my art has oled screens, so i worried about colors on my works looking different to some viewers because they were drawn on an oled display.
This, but in a way more and more people are getting access to OLED panels more notably in smartphones and TVs. However, strangely enough, monitors have been the ones getting stuck with LED and IPS as the ones with OLED are known to be few and costly by the time I'm writing this 🤔
I like both, but probably prefer a LCD when choosing a professional piece of gear. I am currently using a Samsung S8 for drawing and painting digitally, and have found no problems with the OLED display. There may have been an occasion of feeling uncomfortable when viewing the screen for over 30 minutes on a higher brightness than im used to. But otherwise, i keep it pretty dim.
The pwm is a real issue, if I see an oled phone screen more than 10 minutes my eyes get dry really fast. I think a flockering above 3000 hz they say is safe, I'm not sure with 1920hz oled screens and I had an old oled that had like 520hz and it was brutal. The PWM only affects by lowering I think more than 50% of brightness, at 100% has no issues but it will kill your pixels by burning them. Thats probably why designers and artist still prefer ips monitors. Also there are some oleds that have a brightness screen so they use dim light, those are completely safe. I would skip oled screens if I were you. Protect your eyes.
My 15-inch macboo pro specs is LCD display with backlit LED, now my screen has 2very big burn-ins so much so that it's hardly usable, I now usually have to drag the window somewhere where I can view the photo up close, such a bummer! Too bad the iPad Air M2 which I'm eyeing to buy, and other iPad models too use the very same thing as my burned mbp, LCD with backlit LED... wasted money just like that ugh
Hi parka, I really appreciate your reviews on note-taking apps and your deep insights into what makes a great app. I’m working on a new note-taking application and would love to get your thoughts on a few key aspects. If you have a moment, could you share your perspective on these? 1. What are the biggest complaints users have with existing note-taking apps (latency, performance, features, or usability)? 2. What features do users actually want but don’t get in most note-taking apps? 3. Would users pay for a better note-taking app? If yes, what features would make them subscribe? 4. How do current top-performing note-taking apps optimize performance and responsiveness? 5. What’s the biggest challenge in launching a new note-taking app today? If you're available, I’d love to discuss this in more detail. Your insights would be incredibly valuable in shaping something truly useful for users. Thanks in advance for your time! Looking forward to hearing your thoughts.
For me I just need one feature, having the app on multiple platforms so that I can access my notes from any phone, any tablet, any computer. And backup. As for your other questions, you can search the subreddit pages of respective popular note taking apps
Sticking to LCD. The risk of burn-in especially when you’re a digital artist is too great for the money you pay
I agree.
Oled technology, however spectacular, is best suited for TVs and Gaming displays.
It's also important to mention that LCD screens might suffer from image retention which is slightly similar to burn in. I owned the XP Innovator 16, the device suffered from this after a year or so as I was able to see a faint view of my CSP UI over at Discord or any other program that has a dark user interface. On a side note I never used the device above 50% brightness and despite that the image retention appeared after spending 10 minutes or so with a still image.
Despite such issues I was still capable of making use of the display so I kept the device for about 2 years total.
Great video. I learned a lot!
Thanks for the video and your work.
Everyone should weigh up the pros and cons.
And what they need it for.
LCD here. I like my oled samsung tablet, but not everyone who views my art has oled screens, so i worried about colors on my works looking different to some viewers because they were drawn on an oled display.
This, but in a way more and more people are getting access to OLED panels more notably in smartphones and TVs. However, strangely enough, monitors have been the ones getting stuck with LED and IPS as the ones with OLED are known to be few and costly by the time I'm writing this 🤔
I like both, but probably prefer a LCD when choosing a professional piece of gear. I am currently using a Samsung S8 for drawing and painting digitally, and have found no problems with the OLED display. There may have been an occasion of feeling uncomfortable when viewing the screen for over 30 minutes on a higher brightness than im used to. But otherwise, i keep it pretty dim.
The lack of PWM is why I'm stuck with ips. Plus the natural colours. I can't use oled, no matter how much I'd like to. This situation sucks.
LCD 👍
The pwm is a real issue, if I see an oled phone screen more than 10 minutes my eyes get dry really fast. I think a flockering above 3000 hz they say is safe, I'm not sure with 1920hz oled screens and I had an old oled that had like 520hz and it was brutal.
The PWM only affects by lowering I think more than 50% of brightness, at 100% has no issues but it will kill your pixels by burning them. Thats probably why designers and artist still prefer ips monitors.
Also there are some oleds that have a brightness screen so they use dim light, those are completely safe. I would skip oled screens if I were you. Protect your eyes.
My 15-inch macboo pro specs is LCD display with backlit LED, now my screen has 2very big burn-ins so much so that it's hardly usable, I now usually have to drag the window somewhere where I can view the photo up close, such a bummer! Too bad the iPad Air M2 which I'm eyeing to buy, and other iPad models too use the very same thing as my burned mbp, LCD with backlit LED... wasted money just like that ugh
Do you know what caused that? Because LCD should not become faulty like that even with long term usage
Hi parka,
I really appreciate your reviews on note-taking apps and your deep insights into what makes a great app. I’m working on a new note-taking application and would love to get your thoughts on a few key aspects. If you have a moment, could you share your perspective on these?
1. What are the biggest complaints users have with existing note-taking apps (latency, performance, features, or usability)?
2. What features do users actually want but don’t get in most note-taking apps?
3. Would users pay for a better note-taking app? If yes, what features would make them subscribe?
4. How do current top-performing note-taking apps optimize performance and responsiveness?
5. What’s the biggest challenge in launching a new note-taking app today?
If you're available, I’d love to discuss this in more detail. Your insights would be incredibly valuable in shaping something truly useful for users.
Thanks in advance for your time! Looking forward to hearing your thoughts.
For me I just need one feature, having the app on multiple platforms so that I can access my notes from any phone, any tablet, any computer. And backup.
As for your other questions, you can search the subreddit pages of respective popular note taking apps
@teohontech7141 Thank you very much. 😊
@teohontech7141 btw did you get one?
@@ravi-w6l1p I use Nebo and Microsoft OneNote because they meet those two conditions.
@teohontech7141 Anything they lack that you wanna have?
I kinda prefer LCD.
You should buy a mic. The reverb is very distracting.
Is it like echo? My room may be too empty which is causing that
The sound is as always.
Easy to understand.
LCD