blairharrington
Senior member
- Jan 1, 2009
- 767
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The problem is LG hasn't been known for their high quality screens on their own phones until the LG Optimus G Pro now which is a shock to me.Yes, LG does make excellent screens. They've been in the Dell monitors, iPads, and other devices I've purchased in the past couple of years. Samsung makes excellent LCDs too, but not OLEDs.
Who here has said otherwise?The G Pro has a terrific screen. Anyone saying otherwise is crazy.
Yes, LG does make excellent screens. They've been in the Dell monitors, iPads, and other devices I've purchased in the past couple of years. Samsung makes excellent LCDs too, but not OLEDs.
Is the display even made by LG? Isn't the HTC ONE LCD display made by Samsung or something like that?
I'll second this. I had the G Pro for 3 days. Headphone jack output was disappointing by default. Didn't even know you could adjust it.
Another thing I hated was the back speaker. And the notification shade is way too cluttered.
Ended up returning it because it was too big and heavy for my needs. I'm now using the S4 Active happily.
Is the display even made by LG? Isn't the HTC ONE LCD display made by Samsung or something like that?
If Samsung doesn't make excellent OLEDs then who does?
Samsung is leading the OLED race. Super AMOLED smartphone displays and OLED TVs just to name a few.
LG is already selling their OLED HDTVs in Korea and will soon roll out in America in Q3 2013. Who knows if their panels are better than Samsung? For all what we know, Samsung is the only company that uses their own Super AMOLED displays for their smartphones.
Is the display even made by LG? Isn't the HTC ONE LCD display made by Samsung or something like that?
LG is one of the biggest manufacturers for smartphone displays. In fact they are in second place and Samsung is in first place.
AUO is in third place I believe.
Based on my experience, AUO makes the best OLED displays for smartphones.
No, the screens are made by Sharp and JDC.
Wrong again. Sharp is the world's largest display manufacturer for small screens (smartphones). JDC is second. Samsung doesn't really share its display. Not sure about LG.
If Samsung doesn't make excellent OLEDs then who does?
Source?
All I know is that Samsung is the biggest manufacturer of LCDs.
Frankly, no one. They still have too many issues, though they also have advantages. But they're power-hungry in normal use (such as Facebook and web browsing, stuff with a lot of white background color). That and the loss in color accuracy is too much to trade for the thinner construction for some people. Then there's the whole sub-pixel thing....
Anyway, I'm not shocked to see the Samsung fans come out and try to defend their precious brand. They're getting as bad as iPhone fans. The Optimus G Pro is a great phone. The only reason it has less developer support is because it isn't available as widely as cross-carrier models like the One and S4. If it ever comes to Sprint I see that changing quickly, but there are at least mods available for the OGP. Including one to get rid of the QSlide bar in the notification shade. But the screen is gorgeous, reception is great, and the battery life would make a Blackberry envious. And you just have to love the nice, LightFlow compatible notification LED integrated into the home button.![]()
Still - I was tempted to get the OGP until I checked XDA and seriously, there is practically no development going on. I've gotten spoiled to be able to do stuff like easily changing dpi of individual apps as well as the OS via an xposed framework module. Anytime something strikes me, invariably I can find a developer has already created it.
Nice price, it's a shame it's so big.
Heads up: AT&T's price of the Optimus G Pro is lowered to $440 (down $110 from $550)
This is of course the full, contract free, price. Not the subsidized crap (which doesn't change, in case you're wondering)
Might as well wait until S800.
Heads up: AT&T's price of the Optimus G Pro is lowered to $440 (down $110 from $550)
This is of course the full, contract free, price. Not the subsidized crap (which doesn't change, in case you're wondering)