Well, black is black, black is not gray. And the lower the brightness on the IPS, the worse the color range, the higher the brightness, the grayer it is, this does not apply to OLEDs, in addition, OLEDs today normally have 10bit, some phones even have 12bit OLED displays, of course with true black and hdr/dolby vision certifications for playback of HDR content. And yes, IPS, for example, bothers me much more in a laptop. Last 9 months I had a 14″ 2.8k 10bit OLED, 400nit in SDR, 550nit peek in HDR. True Black 500, HDR10, Dolby Vision, 100% DCI-P3 gamut. Now I have a 14.2″ 3k mini LED, 500nit SDR , 1600 nits peek HDR, DolbyVision certification 100% DCI-P3 Gamut. My TV is again OLED, 10 bit, 600 nit HDR peek, True black, HDR10, HDR10+, DolbyVision certification… S23 Ultra and iPhone 13 mini also have OLEDs. I have an old monitor, there is VA 100% sRGB, only 300 nit… But when it is necessary to change, either OLED or miniLED will go there, simply something that has at worst local dimming zones for black to black. It will have 500+ nits of brightness, real HDR (no HDR at 300 nits that you can’t recognize) and will have 220PPI, i.e. 5K ON 27″ or 6k on 32″, ideally with a Thunderbolt connection and a TB dock (the current one is only USB-C and data can max 5Gbit/s)
The opinion was modified 3 times, the last time on 07/16/2023 09:48
2023-07-17 09:10:25
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