- Feb 19, 2003
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Hey guys. It's mid 2015! What's the state of AMOLED vs LCD right now? What are the pros and cons of each?
There's also still some longevity issues, especially with the blue diodes. However, that's more a problem with TVs and monitors than it is with phones. Simply because phones have a fairly short shelf life to begin with.
I think the only thing really holding AMOLED back is cost. IPS displays are a lot cheaper and still offer good image quality. Your average ham & egger isn't going to notice the difference. At least not enough for it to be a deal breaker. So it doesn't make sense for device makers to sacrifice profit margins.
There's also still some longevity issues, especially with the blue diodes. However, that's more a problem with TVs and monitors than it is with phones. Simply because phones have a fairly short shelf life to begin with.
Not personally, but I keep the statusbar toggled off most of the time and don't drive often.Has anyone ever seen a burned display? That's a concern of mine, but I don't know how realistic it is.
why is amoled superior?
The state of things in 2015? AMOLED tech surpassed LCD in many metrics only for Android to use a white theme everywhere.
one of my usual 'wtf google' moments. I no longer give them the capacity to frustrate me. Apple can have the whole market for all I care. Me? I'll just stick to kk4.4
I wonder how samsung shareholders feel about that? It's probably OK considering how many devices they sell and they've made it good enough that it looks good, but..."hey guys, we're going to invest all this money in this technology, and then google is going to change things and negate the primary benefit of it"
So there's no simple "dark" option for Android? WTF? I guess it is so Google can later go "look at all we've done to improve the UI, it's black!" and they'll cycle back and forth so that there will be big contrast. Much like how we'll probably cycle between "flat" and 3D UI designs.
Crap like that is why I've been rolling my eyes at UI design and discussion for a while now (started around the time people started making a fuss over OSX vs WinXP, and have been almost constantly at both Android and iOS).
So there's no simple "dark" option for Android? WTF?
I don't have a problem using high quality displays of either type. I like the deep blacks of AMOLED and the vibrant colors, but sometimes you get oversaturated/unrealistic colors out of the box because consumers like the color pop on the flagship AMOLED smartphones. And LCD displays handle white better in regard to battery life.
I have a slight preference on mobile for OLED, but most users who proclaim how great AMOLED is over LCD are either exaggerating the difference or have limited experience with good LCD panels from Sharp or JDI, for example.
This is one reason I still prefer Windows Phone, though I use Android just as much. Switching between light and dark themes is simple. AMOLED is well suited for WP because of the colorful default tiles and home screen, as well (though you can set transparent tiles and go completely darker if you wish).
I do like Lollipop's UI over Holo otherwise, though, and you can skin/theme Android in custom ROMs like Cyanogenmod or through launchers. My current theme is red and black on Resurrection Remix rather than stock Lollipop. That and other tweaks makes for acceptable battery life on tbis 2013 Moto X I'm using on Sprint.
The ROM provider (OEM) can implement a dark theme with "5 minutes" of work. Googles fault is only to not provide one for the Nexus 6, but that's Google stock policy of design uniformity over utility I guess.
For other phones you should blame the Samsungs, Motorolas and LGs of this world.
Until burn-in is generally not an issue the way it's not an issue in plasma, I don't care.
Add in the dimming, a phone should last for about three years these days before the display is noticeably worse than a new device, and I'm still not ready to switch over. I'll stick with an LCD.
I do hope that by the time I'm in the market for a new phone, my concerns should be addressed, so my opinion is likely moot.
Why would you keep a phone for three years?
Why wouldn't you if it still does all you need?
The smartphone market is one of the most brotherly reaching markets, no one that "matters" is building phones to target the "enthusiasts"....because we're enthusiasts...
The smartphone market is one of the most brotherly reaching markets, no one that "matters" is building phones to target the "enthusiasts".