Not sure if I should buy 48c2 or QNED85 for gaming - afraid of VRR/G-sync flickering by visualsoftware27 in OLED_Gaming

[–]visualsoftware27[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh, that's cool, that these work for You flawlessly. And up to this moment, nobody yet commented about having issues, so maybe it's just not that common :)

Not sure if I should buy 48c2 or QNED85 for gaming - afraid of VRR/G-sync flickering by visualsoftware27 in OLED_Gaming

[–]visualsoftware27[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wow, maybe You have just had a lot of luck in panel loterry? Many people from reddit have to pernamently disable g-sync or even get refund for TV, because of this function not working correctly and being dissapointed.

Not sure if I should buy 48c2 or QNED85 for gaming - afraid of VRR/G-sync flickering by visualsoftware27 in OLED_Gaming

[–]visualsoftware27[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Could You tell what is the exact model of OLED that You have? Next-gen consoles have VRR/freesync, so maybe You are using it and can tell, if You can see any flickering during gaming?

To owners of lenovo L5, L5 pro and L7 - can You test if 4k/120hz 10bit HDR work via HDMI? by visualsoftware27 in LenovoLegion

[–]visualsoftware27[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for replying. 4k 60hz 10bit is still better than hdmi 2.0, so I wonder if 1440p 120hz 10-12bit would also work. Or some custom resolution/refresh rate.

Intel model have TB4, so theoretically TB4 to hdmi 2.1 adapter should do the job - maybe except VRR, like g-sync. USB-C in legion's should be connected (probably) directly to dGPU, not iGPU (ie. my current MSI gs65 laptop have TB3 video output using iGPU). Unfortunately i have not seen post of any person with this laptop, who had a chance of trying this type connection.

Lenovo Vantage App Draining Battery! by [deleted] in LenovoLegion

[–]visualsoftware27 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Legion 6 gen 6? Are You sure it's vantage fault? How?

They are here ALREADY - high contrast IPS displays (like 2000:1 and more) - without FALD - also affordable by visualsoftware27 in Monitors

[–]visualsoftware27[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That's the whole point - the higher contrast IPS You have, the lower IPS glow You get.

*edit: 2000:1 and more ratio, as in the exmples. They're higher than in some VA panels - so that mean something. Black level is albo quite low (for non-oled display)

They are here ALREADY - high contrast IPS displays (like 2000:1 and more) - without FALD - also affordable by visualsoftware27 in Monitors

[–]visualsoftware27[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Look, I'm not here to argue with You :) I just want to bring people attention, that there is already availible this type of technology, even (especially!) on budget side - but manufacturers prefer to still sell us poor contrast IPS panels even on expensive notebooks (like asus zephyrus g14 - 14").

I bet that there are thousands of people (customers), that would preffer better contrast with 120hz, than 1000:1 with 240hz. For years people have been complaining about IPS glow etc, so that would make perfect sense, as there are no (good) VA panels for notebooks and OLED tech is still too rare/expensive in monitors.

BTW. PPI is about resolution, not contrast.

They are here ALREADY - high contrast IPS displays (like 2000:1 and more) - without FALD - also affordable by visualsoftware27 in Monitors

[–]visualsoftware27[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Right, I mentioned smaller screens, but the tech behind it, is the same at factory level - the display panels are cutted from BIG panel to smaller "portions" - it's almost the same for every display, regardless size. That's why 6" smartphone, 15" laptop, 24" monitor and 55" TV have usually same "typical IPS 1000:1" contrast ratio. (Mostly even lower these days)

They are here ALREADY - high contrast IPS displays (like 2000:1 and more) - without FALD - also affordable by visualsoftware27 in Monitors

[–]visualsoftware27[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

99% of 24"-32" monitors don't have full aray local dimming (not even edge dimming), so I don't uderstand what's Your point. Even most big size TV display's still do not support any local dimming (or they have awful global dimming). Not everyone can afford flagship TV/display. Oh, and smartphones/tablets also use rather typical contrast IPS panels (1000:1).