Pic relate probably isn't better than its predecessor.
What's the best display in existence?
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flanders XM312U
Dolby Pulsar
Only available to lease though, and only to big budget studios unless you know someone at dolby who can hook you up.
Sony GDM-F520
>flanders XM312U
It's backlit with 2300 LED zones, which is good, but it'll still have blooming/haloing with small specular highlights (think tiny twinkling stars in space)
Laser projectors, for example samsung LSP9T. Its basically better than MicroLED.
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Why not revive the technology of dual layer LCD? earlier it failed because it required too much energy due to two polarizers, because in non-FALD LCD they take away half light from the backlight. BUT with the FALD Mini-LED, due to the huge number of light zones, you can make the polarizer thinner and much less energy will be consumed.
IPS viewing angles are already bad enough, dual layers are as bad if not worse than TN panels.
I love you so much user.
is this the crt thread
Sony A95 with QD-OLED samsung panel.
>IPS viewing angles are already bad enough
First time I think I've read that. In what world is IPS bad? It may not quite measure up to OLED, but it's far from bad, and easily the best of any LCD panel type.
Also it's wrong to say dual layer viewing angles are bad. They may not be great on the professional displays, but the U9DG has surprisingly good viewing angles.
> It may not quite measure up to OLED
It's quite a difference, you can always instantly at a glance tell IPS apart from OLED/CRT just by viewing angles alone.
The biggest IPS viewing-angle issues are at blacks too. IPS glow, like in picture, is not a backlight bleed issue, it's IPS viewing angles.
Other colors on IPS monitors are just barely "good enough", usually staying stable at best to 35 degree angles. It still just looks like shit next to a proper surface-emissive display.
The TV in your picture is using a 1080p grayscale with a 4k rgb layer, so it makes sense its performance doesn't degrade that much versus a normal IPS panel. But it still suffers from glow apparently, since it washes out at mere moderate angles.
I agree IPS glow is an issue with regular IPS panels. It IS largely fixable using an A-TW polarizer or retardation film like Eizo does, but panels using those are few and far between.
Having said that, IPS glow shouldn't be nearly as much of an issue with dual layer due to the much darker native black levels.
>t IS largely fixable using an A-TW polarizer or retardation film like Eizo does
If you can mention any displays using that, I might consider buying one.
>IPS glow shouldn't be nearly as much of an issue with dual layer due to the much darker native black levels.
That's what I'd think too, but the above RTINGS review mentions the picture washing out, which I interpet as a glow thing.
But anyway I just don't think slapping more filters to an already filtered-looking display type is doing us many favors. Picture of OLEDs and CRTs just looks so much less cheap and "processed" than of LCDs, thanks to their surface-emissivity. I really hate there's almost no way to get that kind of quality currently on a monitor.
Any qd oled panel should be pretty solid for up to 1k nits brightness?
If you want a 4k nits hdr mastering monitor then I guess you need to pay up 40k €
>If you can mention any displays using that, I might consider buying one
These are the models I know of:
LG
32GQ950
Eizo
CG319X
CG2700S
CG2420
>the above RTINGS review mentions the picture washing out, which I interpet as a glow thing
I could be wrong, but I don't think it is. IPS glow is most visible on dark areas of an image, but they only mention the colors washing out, while stating that everything else remained accurate. Anecdotally, people that have had the TV have said the viewing angles are nearly as good as OLED. For what that's worth.
>32GQ950
>CG319X
>CG2700S
>CG2420
Appreciate it, but all of them cost more than the AW3423DW QD-OLED ....
1600€ for a pathethic 1920x1200 in the current year.
Definitely the kind of monitors you get your boss to buy you ..
>I could be wrong, but I don't think it is. IPS glow is most visible on dark areas of an image, but they only mention the colors washing out,
Yea honestly it could be another effect of IPS displays, but the washing-out at >45 deg is a very familiar thing to me. To my eyes it just looks like IPS-glow getting strong enough to wash out everything.
Its her bigger sister.
In reality the best display is the best one that you can get your hands on for free.
Paypigs will disagree
Welp. We had a good 19 post thread before it got spammed again.
Derailing this thread
How do I become an enthusiast when it comes to this as in I want to keep up with the times