I am, for the most part satisfied with my Nexus One's screen. I know it's not perfect, but it's better than the G1 that I replaced.
However, the one thing about this screen that I hate is the extended color gamut, primarily because there is no color management in these devices. High-gamut capabilities are great. However, since existing content assumes roughly an sRGB gamut, and this phone is closer to Adobe98, the result is blown-out greens and reds, in this case almost fluorescent. I am guessing that if Google were to have implemented some sort of gamut compensation, it would have further reduced the number of available shades, leading to more stippling and banding.
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[ 4.0 ms ] story [ 10.1 ms ] threadHowever, the one thing about this screen that I hate is the extended color gamut, primarily because there is no color management in these devices. High-gamut capabilities are great. However, since existing content assumes roughly an sRGB gamut, and this phone is closer to Adobe98, the result is blown-out greens and reds, in this case almost fluorescent. I am guessing that if Google were to have implemented some sort of gamut compensation, it would have further reduced the number of available shades, leading to more stippling and banding.