Apple confirms: iPhone X users might experience "burn-in"
Apple finally started officially selling the iPhone X yesterday,
and some elements of the device are coming to light for the first time.
Some of the more important features of the phone have been reviewed over
and over again in the past few days but some aren't going to unveil
themselves for long time.
Face ID has been one of the more closely inspected features, and it
seems that excluding a few problems with the face detection most
impressions have been positive. Another important feature is of course
the new 5.8 inch display, a first OLED panel in an iPhone.
Now Apple has released a document that details some of the features of an OLED display. This includes explaining the many pros of the first ever iPhone OLED but also a few cons that might affect your viewing pleasures.
According to the document you may experience shifts in colors when viewed off-angle. This is of course normal for an OLED display, and according to reports nowhere near as bad as with the Pixel 2 displays, which have been criticized heavily.
The second one is another one of OLED's typical shortcomings, "burn-in". The burn-in, or "image persistence", is a phenomenon where a static image may burn a ghost image in the display that will be permanent.
The severity of the problem depends on the display but hasn't been much of a problem in other Samsung produced displays. Apple also says that the display is "best in the industry in reducing the effects" and that they have engineered it themselves that way specifically burn-in in mind. The iOS 11 experience also takes into account that iPhone X has an OLED display and reduces the severity of burn-in effect with software solutions.
The iPhone X has a 5.8 Super Retina HD (2436 x 1125 resolution, 458 PPI) display which covers the front panel nearly entirely. It has been manufactured by Samsung but Apple takes credit for engineering and designing it. It has a million-to-one contrast ratio and HDR support.
Now Apple has released a document that details some of the features of an OLED display. This includes explaining the many pros of the first ever iPhone OLED but also a few cons that might affect your viewing pleasures.
According to the document you may experience shifts in colors when viewed off-angle. This is of course normal for an OLED display, and according to reports nowhere near as bad as with the Pixel 2 displays, which have been criticized heavily.
The second one is another one of OLED's typical shortcomings, "burn-in". The burn-in, or "image persistence", is a phenomenon where a static image may burn a ghost image in the display that will be permanent.
The severity of the problem depends on the display but hasn't been much of a problem in other Samsung produced displays. Apple also says that the display is "best in the industry in reducing the effects" and that they have engineered it themselves that way specifically burn-in in mind. The iOS 11 experience also takes into account that iPhone X has an OLED display and reduces the severity of burn-in effect with software solutions.
The iPhone X has a 5.8 Super Retina HD (2436 x 1125 resolution, 458 PPI) display which covers the front panel nearly entirely. It has been manufactured by Samsung but Apple takes credit for engineering and designing it. It has a million-to-one contrast ratio and HDR support.
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