> While both the standard glass and nano-texture glass options of Pro Display XDR are engineered for extremely low reflectivity, it helps to consider your work environment when deciding which one is right for you.
> If you’re in an especially uncontrolled lighting environment, there’s an innovative matte option with nano-texture glass. Typical matte displays have a coating added to their surface that scatters light. However, these coatings lower contrast while producing unwanted haze and sparkle. The nano-texture on Pro Display XDR is actually etched into the glass at the nanometer level. The result is a screen with beautiful image quality that maintains contrast while scattering light to reduce glare to the barest minimum.
I guess you are not following the news. There has been a rumor for a low end iPhone coming out this March. Nothing to do with the high end iPhones of September.
1,000,000 to 1 seems like crazy hype. I assume that's like the brightest color to the blackest black. The thing is, at 10 bits the brightest white is 1023 times the second darkest gray. I doubt anyone can tell the difference.
Forgive me, but is this a joke? You have an 8K monitor? If yes, would you mind if I asked why and how you use this? What makes it worth it?
I’m in the market for a new monitor. I’m coming from the first “nice” monitor I’ve ever had: a ~$300 27 inch LG HDR 4K. I thought it would be perfect, but to be honest it leaves a lot to be desired. It’s not even bright enough to beat the light coming through my office windows. What am I really paying for at these higher price tiers? Is it possible to meet somewhere in the middle? I do graphic, but not video, work.
maybe check https://www.rtings.com/ they have monitor reviews divided by categories (for example creative work) and they test every possible aspect (for example brightness in brightly lit rooms, peak brightness etc.) that might help you.
you can also sort, filter and compare the different options. it's really good and they do all their testing themselves and buy all the monitors instead of getting review samples.
I use it exclusively for programming. An 8k monitor is not a necessity, by any stretch: A good, large 4k monitor is more than enough for coding. I'd rather not voice an opinion about graphics or video usage because I don't know about the needs of these fields.
I don’t know why this is posted now, but since it’s here I wanted to share this review which I thought was incredibly well crafted and refreshing to watch.
Finally. The crazy lengths that 3rd party adapters go to to convert Apple displays are crazy, and it's absurd that they haven't used VESA for this long.
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[ 5.0 ms ] story [ 28.8 ms ] threadEDIT: misread the page; thought that's a new screen from Apple.
So is the news that it's now orderable for people who can afford $6K for a monitor amid a pandemic?
I hadn't really noticed the very video-production friendly refresh rates before though (mostly because I'm not in the market).
>47.95Hz 48.00Hz 50.00Hz 59.94Hz 60.00Hz
> If you’re in an especially uncontrolled lighting environment, there’s an innovative matte option with nano-texture glass. Typical matte displays have a coating added to their surface that scatters light. However, these coatings lower contrast while producing unwanted haze and sparkle. The nano-texture on Pro Display XDR is actually etched into the glass at the nanometer level. The result is a screen with beautiful image quality that maintains contrast while scattering light to reduce glare to the barest minimum.
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamma_correction for the gory details.
OLED's could be much better.
I don't think this comparison has anything to do with bit depth.
I’m in the market for a new monitor. I’m coming from the first “nice” monitor I’ve ever had: a ~$300 27 inch LG HDR 4K. I thought it would be perfect, but to be honest it leaves a lot to be desired. It’s not even bright enough to beat the light coming through my office windows. What am I really paying for at these higher price tiers? Is it possible to meet somewhere in the middle? I do graphic, but not video, work.
you can also sort, filter and compare the different options. it's really good and they do all their testing themselves and buy all the monitors instead of getting review samples.
https://youtu.be/rtd7UzLJHrU
Finally. The crazy lengths that 3rd party adapters go to to convert Apple displays are crazy, and it's absurd that they haven't used VESA for this long.