greydarrah
Well-known member
- May 5, 2010
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I just stopped by Verizon to look at the pentile screen on the Droid X2 and thought it looked great. It's all a matter of personal perspective.
My assumption on why the D3 seems better than the X2 is the smaller display. They have the same resolution, but the smaller display forces the pixels to be smaller, and thus finer.
On a side note i thought the color green on devices was because it uses the least amount of power to display? Any little bit helps.
my wife's D3 looks worlds better than the X2 I looked at back when I bought the D3 for her (was bored at the store while they were setting her phone up). I think they may have improved the screen (yeah not by leaps and bounds but enough to notice for my eyes at least) between the X2 and D3 so here is to hoping that from D3 to DB that it is even better. One could only hope you know.![]()
Why is there still debate about whether the D3 screen looks better than the X2 because of size? The Photon just came out with a 4.3" pentile screen. There's no reason to even bother looking at the X2 any more.
Probably true, this is a legitimate advantage of Pentile.
- Cuts power consumption in half for equivalent brightness, or
Same as the previous claim, just stated differently.
- Doubles screen brightness for equivalent power
NO IT DOESN'T. It achieves a bigger number that manufacturers can advertise, while actually providing fewer subpixels, which are the screen elements actually visible to a user.
- Achieves higher resolution
In other words, it's more complicated to produce legible output.
- Provides flexible settings for color control and power savings
Plausible. Less power draw gives manufacturers more freedom.
- Increases cost savings potential and yield for manufacturers
In other words, it stresses the GPU, which has to work harder to render more pixels. This is an advantage?!
- Accelerates adoption of next-generation devices
Only for black text on white background (or is it the reverse?), other text and line art looks like crap.
- Makes text easier to read
I couldn't agree more. The pentile screen on my DX2 may as well be b&w because color letters are illegible
Sent from my A500 using Tapatalk
Okay, can't resist...
Probably true, this is a legitimate advantage of Pentile.
Same as the previous claim, just stated differently.
NO IT DOESN'T. It achieves a bigger number that manufacturers can advertise, while actually providing fewer subpixels, which are the screen elements actually visible to a user.
In other words, it's more complicated to produce legible output.
Plausible. Less power draw gives manufacturers more freedom.
In other words, it stresses the GPU, which has to work harder to render more pixels. This is an advantage?!
Only for black text on white background (or is it the reverse?), other text and line art looks like crap.
...NO IT DOESN'T. It achieves a bigger number that manufacturers can advertise, while actually providing fewer subpixels, which are the screen elements actually visible to a user. .
Too many people make this claim so its time to clear it up. The number of pixels in a display, let alone the sub-pixels, have NOTHING to do with a displays stated resolution.
Thats right. There is usually a correlation between the 2 with digital displays, but I will say it again, pixels have nothing to do with the resolution a manufacturer can advertise for a display.
VESA sets this standard and it has to do with displaying alternating black & white lines while maintaining a modulated contrast ratio of at least 50%. So the qHD Motorola display has to be able to show 480 horizontal black/white line pairs and 270 vertical ones while maintaining the stated contrast ratio. In fact it does so with a modulated ratio of around 75%
No offense, but I believe this is mostly wrong and useless. Both a Pentile and a traditional RGB display with 960x540 pixels will be advertised as "960x540" by manufacturers regardless of what VESA defines, and monochrome horizontal and vertical line pair contrast ratios are totally irrelevant with devices that are normally used in full color -- not black and white.
You can think that all you want, but it is the ONLY standard that exists for determining the resolution you can advertise for a display.