- Jan 5, 2010
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Any phone in direct sunlight is going to require you to cover it with your body's shadow or a hand... I have still been able to use it in direct sun by just repositioning my body... If that's the sacrifice I need to make to in order to have this type of screen quality at all other times? Then so be it...
Not sure if you already have one, but there are Droid specific screen covers sold in a 3 pack by Verizon that are supposed to cancel a lot of the glare issue on the Droids. Can't testify or not if they actually work, I have the covers, but my phone arrives today! HTH!
Yeah what cellphone is usable in direct sunlight......
Yeah what cellphone is usable in direct sunlight......
Love the phone, screen bites in sunlight. oh well.
I see this as just one more reason to avoid the giant burning thing in the sky. I stay indoors, where my skin retains it's pasty glow AND I can see my phone's screen. Win/win, I say.
True that all cellphones are harder to see in direct sunlight.
The problem people are referring to about the Inc. is the AMOLED screen which is even HARDER to see in direct sunlight than a traditional cell phone screen (whatever the material may be).
I believe that its not really up for debate whether the AMOLED screen on the Inc. is harder to see in sunlight than other screens. IT IS.
Now, its up to individuals to decide how much of a problem this is to them (if any) and to weigh the positives and negatives about this type of screen.
If its not a problem for you, Great!
For some it is an issue though.
My only suggestion, which works for me, is to just turn the screen brightness all the way up. I used to turn it up, using the HTC widget, only when I was outside, but now I just find it better to leave it up all the time.
Really tell that to my Blackberry Storm, Eris, Moto Razr, iPhone......I think you get the picture. None of them have the color saturation or the brightness to over power the brightness of the sun in direct light. The debate isn't about AMOLED versus LED, LCD, or Matrix. It's about people's high ass expectations on cellular phones to perform in every environment.
And don't get me wrong if they promised me it would work in direct sunlight then I would be one of the more vocal people here, I just thinks it's stupid to complain about because no electronic display on a small device is readable easily in direct sunlight. The argument isn't coming from me of, "I can see it just fine", I can't see my phone in direct sunlight just like everyone else. My point is people expecting this phone to dance a rain dance and then cook dinner for them....
/rant
