I used infuse for iPad. The source is a Remux of the UltraHD 4K Bluray.What did you use as the source? Just curious.
I used infuse for iPad. The source is a Remux of the UltraHD 4K Bluray.What did you use as the source? Just curious.
I am sorry if I did not convey my meaning properly. If anyone feels disappointed by their display, they should return it ASAP. Again, if it is obvious during normal use something is wrong, and Apple will swap your device. My personal unit does not show the dithering pattern during normal use. The only time I can see it is only under VERY specific circumstances and even then, it is so faint that even when pointed out to other people, they cannot see it. I've only seen 2 iPad pro's. My own and my wife's, they both have the dithering problem, but it is so minor, that I would not consider returning or exchanging them. If you see the issue and it bothers you, then by all means go ahead and get it exchanged/returned.I don't understand.
If most iPad Pro OLED displays are fine, but a small portion have grain issues, the buyer should return it for a model that doesn't, and Apple should fix quality control so there isn't a drastic panel lottery.
Thats it.
That is an excellent point. The influencer's "reviews" are so meaningless and lack any objective information. Even now I would like to know more hard facts about the display and the new tandem oled technology. How is panel uniformity, what downsides come with the tandem OLED tech if any. Yet no one is writing about that. I miss the days of written reviews. Nowadays everything is all flash and no substance.For me, it’s very hard to see. In a dark room on the iPad in dark mode 6” from my face and can’t see it at all. The screen is great overall.
My only frustration with the grain/mura is actually not with apple but with reviewers.
In depth screen analysis, discussion of trade offs between different panels or tech options, measurement of panel quality including this mura/grain, are all things I would expect from a review.
Instead we just get “looks good” which yeah it does but tell me something about the product I can’t tell myself within 2 seconds of using it!
GraingateI thought I noticed this on the ones I looked at in the Apple Store today and even checked to see if it was the nano display and it was not. I just rote it off as my imagination and forgot about it. Now I've seen a couple of other reports on the web in regards to this. I just picked up the 11" 1TB cellular that cost a pretty penny but thinking of not even opening it and returning if this becomes more of an apparent issue. Anyone else seeing this up close?
Update:setup my 11 and I do not see this issue at all.
I think the real in-depths reviews take more time and will come later. I‘m sure Vincent from HDTV Test will take a look at the screen as well at some point.That is an excellent point. The influencer's "reviews" are so meaningless and lack any objective information. Even now I would like to know more hard facts about the display and the new tandem oled technology. How is panel uniformity, what downsides come with the tandem OLED tech if any. Yet no one is writing about that. I miss the days of written reviews. Nowadays everything is all flash and no substance.
Thanks for clarifying. The confusion in this thread seems to be in the differences of experience.I am sorry if I did not convey my meaning properly. If anyone feels disappointed by their display, they should return it ASAP. Again, if it is obvious during normal use something is wrong, and Apple will swap your device. My personal unit does not show the dithering pattern during normal use. The only time I can see it is only under VERY specific circumstances and even then, it is so faint that even when pointed out to other people, they cannot see it. I've only seen 2 iPad pro's. My own and my wife's, they both have the dithering problem, but it is so minor, that I would not consider returning or exchanging them. If you see the issue and it bothers you, then by all means go ahead and get it exchanged/returned.
Indeed. I miss the days of Anandtech in-depth analysis.That is an excellent point. The influencer's "reviews" are so meaningless and lack any objective information. Even now I would like to know more hard facts about the display and the new tandem oled technology. How is panel uniformity, what downsides come with the tandem OLED tech if any. Yet no one is writing about that. I miss the days of written reviews. Nowadays everything is all flash and no substance.
LOL with an image of FlavaFlav with an iPad around HIS neck down to infinity!You hang your iPad around your neck? (I’m not judging.)
That is an excellent point. The influencer's "reviews" are so meaningless and lack any objective information. Even now I would like to know more hard facts about the display and the new tandem oled technology. How is panel uniformity, what downsides come with the tandem OLED tech if any. Yet no one is writing about that. I miss the days of written reviews. Nowadays everything is all flash and no substance.
RTINGS has excellent reviews for TVs and monitors and laptops, but unfortunately no reviews of phones or tablets.Indeed. I miss the days of Anandtech in-depth analysis.
its clear you don’t understand. you have a fear that it’s a manufacturing issue, that even if true has zero practical implication, but it’s just as likely it’s a limitation of the technology that is highly subjective and only evident under a very contrived situation. For some reason you feel the need to turn this into a crusade when at this point it’s all speculation.I don't understand.
If most iPad Pro OLED displays are fine, but a small portion have grain issues, the buyer should return it for a model that doesn't, and Apple should fix quality control so there isn't a drastic panel lottery.
Thats it.
Its me or the screen of my new 11 pro it has a yellowish tint in it? I compared it to the 12.9 M2 and the difference is day and night. Like the 12.9 looks bright blue (the normal color for screens) and this one it seems that has a bluelight filter
Every settings that modifies the screen colors are disabled (true tone, night mode, etc)Did you check TrueTone?
check out the other thread and my imagesIts me or the screen of my new 11 pro it has a yellowish tint in it? I compared it to the 12.9 M2 and the difference is day and night. Like the 12.9 looks bright blue (the normal color for screens) and this one it seems that has a bluelight filter
Get in a dark room, enable dark mode, set brightness around 40%, then open up battery in settings and see if you can notice it with the graphs, etc.
Pro photographers and video editors generally edit in light controlled (read: low light) rooms
No it’s exactly the point. most people who cite this issue cite the screen looks fine unless in a dark room. Photographers aren’t in a dark room.And thats beside the point. If a photographer is looking at work, and can't tell as clear a difference between grain and noise, thats not good
Why that is difficult to sympathize with, is surprising for a supposed photographer.
That's not something I see on my units. Just to confirm, you can see the pattern with your naked eye? is not an artifact from your picture? if so, I would consider exchanging it.I’m getting this weird grainy/shadow effect on pretty much my entire iPad. Text is more noticeable though View attachment 2379115
Why didn't you take a picture from straight on?check out the other thread and my images
I returned mine due to very warm/yellow screen.
Screen Color
My new 11 inch M4 ipad pro OLED is much much warmer compared to my M1 12.9 MiniLED iPad Pro. Both True Tone and Night Shift are OFF Wondering what's up here.forums.macrumors.com
Others have had same issue and have had better luck with a replacement unit.
I didn't understand the sentiment behind the comment I was responding to. We worked it out.its clear you don’t understand. you have a fear that it’s a manufacturing issue, that even if true has zero practical implication, but it’s just as likely it’s a limitation of the technology that is highly subjective and only evident under a very contrived situation. For some reason you feel the need to turn this into a crusade when at this point it’s all speculation.
Uh oh, I’m noticing it too. It’s not completely unpleasant—it looks like an ultrafine film grain—except for the fact that this thing was $1600 and it shouldn’t be there.
Colours widgetHow did you get your home screen to look like that?