That is where you’ll see it, in the dark areas.I am looking at my 12.9 iPad 2021, playing U2 360 concert - gorgeous. I don't see blooming, and that's what maters. I don't care if it blooms a little in text edit or serttings.
That is where you’ll see it, in the dark areas.I am looking at my 12.9 iPad 2021, playing U2 360 concert - gorgeous. I don't see blooming, and that's what maters. I don't care if it blooms a little in text edit or serttings.
OK, but don't really care. Video content is superb.That is where you’ll see it, in the dark areas.
I sold my near 1 year old 12.9" 6 months ago went back to a 11", lucky only dropped a few under AU here.Personally, after using my 2021 iPad Pro since launch, I'm overall disappointed in this incarnation of the "Liquid Retina XDR display." Watching any HDR content (whether videos or photos) is phenomenal and way beyond any other iPad. General usage in light mode is no different. General usage in dark mode is a bitter disappointment.
While it isn't nearly as bad as many of the pictures on here make it out to be, it is very noticeable. Every control in the notes app has a haze, off-axis viewing is cloudy, and when using a mouse there is a massive square of hazy light around this tiny mouse pointer. There must be a reason for it or Apple would have tweaked the algorithms, but I don't notice this issue really at all with my MacBook Pro.
I know this isolated bloom is better than full-screen bloom of traditional LEDs (I suppose), but I find the overall experience a large compromise and don't plan to buy another iPad until they move onto a different display tech.
Not sure what OLED you have used but it is known to have 0 blooming unlike mini led. If you can’t see it, great, but it is certainly there.Y’all know OLED blooms too right?
*not trying to cause any offense or a fight… but it’s basically impossible to control the light bleed 100% (because science) 😉✌️… here’s Samsungs top OLED tablet (that has blooming and without being in a dark room you can see it.)Not sure what OLED you have used but it is known to have 0 blooming unlike mini led. If you can’t see it, great, but it is certainly there.
*not trying to cause any offense or a fight… but it’s basically impossible to control the light bleed 100% (because science) 😉✌️… here’s Samsungs top OLED tablet (that has blooming and without being in a dark room you can see it.)
The same “draw out more light” applies to the photos people took of the mini-LED. OLED is less light bleed-y and sharp… agreed.I feel like the OLED blooming is due to (1) the camera used to take the picture tries to draw out more light and (2) you can get some refraction depending on the display glass and how it's laminated. On the panel itself you don't have bloom as only the active pixels are lit up. With miniLED it's turning on tiny lights behind whatever group has the active pixel so non-active pixels will be illuminated as well.
I'm curious if you are testing all of this in pitch black darkness. I tested this myself and it was nearly impossible to see any blooming if even minimal amounts of ambient light were present. In which case, the doctor's advice is simply "don't do that!"Personally, after using my 2021 iPad Pro since launch, I'm overall disappointed in this incarnation of the "Liquid Retina XDR display." Watching any HDR content (whether videos or photos) is phenomenal and way beyond any other iPad. General usage in light mode is no different. General usage in dark mode is a bitter disappointment.
While it isn't nearly as bad as many of the pictures on here make it out to be, it is very noticeable. Every control in the notes app has a haze, off-axis viewing is cloudy, and when using a mouse there is a massive square of hazy light around this tiny mouse pointer. There must be a reason for it or Apple would have tweaked the algorithms, but I don't notice this issue really at all with my MacBook Pro.
I know this isolated bloom is better than full-screen bloom of traditional LEDs (I suppose), but I find the overall experience a large compromise and don't plan to buy another iPad until they move onto a different display tech.
Usually very dim lighting situations such as Hue lights set to the 10% which is what I do during late nights or early morningsI'm curious if you are testing all of this in pitch black darkness. I tested this myself and it was nearly impossible to see any blooming if even minimal amounts of ambient light were present. In which case, the doctor's advice is simply "don't do that!"
I'm very pleased with the display overall.
Nothing has happened to change it.Is this still an issue? Not to silence the people with blooming, but like... it's been over two months.
So, between one release and the next I saw that waggling the cursor in a “black” area would turn off those pixels almost immediately instead of waiting until the cursor had stopped moving, but that’s more of an ambient refresh speed more than it has anything to do with blooming.Is this still an issue? Not to silence the people with blooming, but like... it's been over two months.
Or jelly scroll. Blooming is so yesterday.So, between one release and the next I saw that waggling the cursor in a “black” area would turn off those pixels almost immediately instead of waiting until the cursor had stopped moving, but that’s more of an ambient refresh speed more than it has anything to do with blooming.
By now, there’s likely just more entertaining things to complain about (like the Mac Pro).
To sum up, yes, because it’s the screen that Apple uses for the iPad pros, it’s not really a defective issue. Some people notice, some don’t, some notice but chooses to ignore it. This problem sill be resolved when Apple decides to use bother screen technology for the nest iPads.Is this still an issue? Not to silence the people with blooming, but like... it's been over two months.
I bought a Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra with an OLED display and now the jelly scroll on the M1 iPad Pro has rendered it unusable for me. On a dark background the trail left by text is so noticeable and causes eye strain while on the oled it's instantaneous. Also, dark content looks perfect on oled while blooming is rampant on the M1 iPad. I would go so far as to say the grayish blacks of the older iPad were less distracting.Or jelly scroll. Blooming is so yesterday.
Do you also see the trailing behind text while scrolling on the iPad Pro? Most notcieable on a dark background. It seems to be a response time issue but causes eye strain for me.To sum up, yes, because it’s the screen that Apple uses for the iPad pros, it’s not really a defective issue. Some people notice, some don’t, some notice but chooses to ignore it. This problem sill be resolved when Apple decides to use bother screen technology for the nest iPads.
Oh. Sorry, I haven't experienced it firsthand so by the 2 mo. of silence I assumed it was fixed? But if it isn't then boo to Apple.To sum up, yes, because it’s the screen that Apple uses for the iPad pros, it’s not really a defective issue. Some people notice, some don’t, some notice but chooses to ignore it. This problem sill be resolved when Apple decides to use bother screen technology for the nest iPads.
It's simply the state of the tech. We will see if Apple sticks to MiniLED or switches to OLED in the future I guess.Oh. Sorry, I haven't experienced it firsthand so by the 2 mo. of silence I assumed it was fixed? But if it isn't then boo to Apple.
It's a tradeoff with MiniLED but the reason it's so bad on the iPad is because Apple prioritized brightness over blooming to make HDR impactful. Samsung MiniLED monitors like the Neo G7 and Neo G8 have close to OLED blacks because their algorithm prioritizes deep blacks over brightness.Oh. Sorry, I haven't experienced it firsthand so by the 2 mo. of silence I assumed it was fixed? But if it isn't then boo to Apple.
Oh. Sorry, I haven't experienced it firsthand so by the 2 mo. of silence I assumed it was fixed? But if it isn't then boo to Apple.
Oh. So the only "fix" in sight is a switch to OLED?Not fixed and probably never will be. The mini-LED MacBook Pros have significantly less blooming than the mini-LED iPad Pros, but it’s still present. Even with the improvements on the MBP, I was watching an HDR show on it in the dark last week, and there was a night scene with a lot of flashing lights. It was comical how bad it looked due to the blooming, like you couldn’t even discern what was happening. This is likely one of the reasons Apple is expected to move to OLED for both the iPad Pros and MacBook Pros next year. Mini-LED is a stopgap between LCD and OLED.