darkswordsman17
Lifer
- Mar 11, 2004
- 23,444
- 5,846
- 146
Well for me when I look at pictures or videos on my phone I would like them to be close to d6500 white point if at all possible. I do like to have accuracy myself.
And there's nothing preventing OLEDs from doing that, as we've seen with Samsung's OLED panels the past few years.
Simply put, if you dismiss Samsung OLED based on color accuracy you're being actively dishonest and don't know what you're talking about. (I'm not saying you're doing that.)
OLED has only just recently (within the past 1-2 years) approached LCD in terms of colour accuracy, so I wouldn't fault Apple or others for steering clear of it for a while. It's no doubt on the Watch in part because accuracy doesn't really matter there so much as black levels.
And yes, accuracy matters on a phone. Like cmdrdredd noted, it's good to know if the photo you just took is true to life, or if the project proofs a coworker just sent are reasonably on the mark. We don't need perfect colours yet, but "reasonably close" is a good target.
You can't have it both ways. You can't claim accuracy matters and then say "well within reason" and then act like Apple's LCD offers that but Samsung's OLED doesn't. If that's all you're aiming for (which by the way, that's exactly the point I was making, I just said its a farcical argument in that people dismiss OLED for it but ignore the fact that smartphones especially in typical use are not going to offer the color accuracy that people claim they need) then OLED has offered that for several years now (IIRC even the Note 3 and S4 would be good enough for your estimation, you would have to put it in the correct mode, but it absolutely was possible). And like I said, you're completely dismissing environment use and if you think your LCD is being more accurate most of the time I'd wager that you're just simply wrong about that. Just look at the iPad Pro, its clear that Apple even clearly understands how much the environment you're in affects color accuracy and wants to work to address that.
As is Samsung:
http://www.displaymate.com/Galaxy_Note7_ShootOut_1.htm
We'll see how the iPhone 7 matches up there.
I actually love Apple's focus on quality and accuracy and am glad that Samsung has taken it to heart (likely in attempt to win production for iPhone/Apple displays), but OLED really is about to eclipse LCD. It still offers all the things that wow people but is also offering the accuracy and quality that people are getting out of high-end LCDs (and don't forget that, use non-Apple stuff and you'll find their quality and accuracy is quite wonky and all over the place). With Apple pushing it, OLED will only get even better.
Well, at least LCD's don't have the same problem of Samsung OLEDs that still burn in...
Apple should move to OLED after they fix that.
Actually there are plenty of LCDs that do exhibit burn-in, including those in iPhones:
https://discussions.apple.com/thread/6595680?start=0&tstart=0
Now it is true that OLED does exhibit it worse than LCD, so that's a fair point, but its hardly every screen that suffers from it. (My Note 3 for instance never had burn-in).