Do you have auto brightness on? Samsung is the king of displays in the sunlight.
I never use auto brightness. I turn the Galaxy full brightness and the iPhone is still easier to see. Apple has them beat in sunlight, at least in my experience, and that surprises me.
Turn on auto brightness and it will kick into a mode you can't toggle -- that is why. Even manually setting it to full brightness will not have the phone kick into its highest mode. It reserves that for when Auto is on and it sees the sunlight..
Yes but that might cause burn in...
And you can always tell Google (or is it Bixby in Samsungs now) to set the screen for 20% when you come indoors if it doesn't dim enough. (Yes, 20% is more than enough for these old cataract-corrected eyes, so it should be enough for you.)
How much light do you run in your room? Enough to tan?
Yes but that might cause burn in...
Yup. That's what I use.Turn on auto brightness and it will kick into a mode you can't toggle -- that is why. Even manually setting it to full brightness will not have the phone kick into its highest mode. It reserves that for when Auto is on and it sees the sunlight..
Well you have to pick between a clearly visible screen or and burn in... Your choice.Yes but that might cause burn in...
Thank you. I will try that.Turn on auto brightness and it will kick into a mode you can't toggle -- that is why. Even manually setting it to full brightness will not have the phone kick into its highest mode. It reserves that for when Auto is on and it sees the sunlight..
I have the S9+, iPhone X, iPhone 8 plus, Pixel 2 XL and none of them come close to the S9+ brightness and visibility in sunlight.I never use auto brightness. I turn the Galaxy full brightness and the iPhone is still easier to see. Apple has them beat in sunlight, at least in my experience, and that surprises me.
Ya very few can. Their own screen tech combined with their own coded display drivers. It's win win for them in that area. Though it's not always how bright a screen can get to make it more viewable in bright light. Contrast shading and other automatic color rendering changes that are done automatically help you to see the objects in the screen better. They offset the bright light or sunlight depending on how they are used.I agree with last 2 posters...haven't seen a phone beat the s9 in out door lighting