It really annoys me to see how manufacturers failed to increase the screen resolution of PC laptops over the last few years.
In June 2010, Steve Jobs introduced the iPhone 4 with Retina Display, which consisted of a 4-inch screen with a 960x640 resolution. According to Apple, the high pixel density (326 ppi) made individual pixels invisible to the human eye.
In June 2012, about two years later, Tim Cook introduced the first MacBook Pro with Retina Display, a 15.4-inch screen with a 2880x1800 resolution. In October 2012, the 13.3-inch MacBook Pro also received a Retina Display, with a 2560x1600 resolution. The iPad had already received a Retina Display a few months earlier.
The last Apple product to get a Retina Display was the iMac. The 27-incher got one in 2014, and the 21.5-incher, in 2015.
Smartphone manufacturers followed suit, and while they could not use the "Retina Display" trademark, shortly thereafter, they also started to offer high pixel densities in their screens.
In fact, I cannot recall the last time I saw a smartphone in which I could see the individual pixels. All models, including the cheap low-end ones, include a high-resolution display. I remember when I got a Moto Z Play, a medium-range phone launched in 2016, and it had a 1920x1080 resolution. Last year, I got a Galaxy S20 Plus, which had a 3040x1440 resolution in a 6.7-inch screen (which was far more than I needed).
Just take a look at Amazon.com and you will find a Galaxy A50 selling for $200, and it includes an AMOLED screen with a 2340x1080 resolution. Very cheap, and high pixel density.
High pixel density screens are in nearly every smartphone. But not in laptops.
In January 2016, I bought a Dell XPS 9550, which came with a 4K screen. It had a beautiful 15.6-inch display with a 3840x2160 resolution. I paid $1,900 for it.
I thought that these retina-like screens would become more popular in laptops over the years. Within 5 years, I thought, it would be in nearly every laptop. Nearly all smartphones already had retina-like screens by 2016, a few years after the iPhone got one, so it was just a matter of time. But it did not happen.
Now, we are in 2021. More than five years after I purchased my XPS 15, Dell still only offers a resolution higher than Full HD in its high-end XPS line of laptops. It never made into the Inspiron line.
But it is not only Dell. Nearly all manufacturers, with few exceptions, offer a retina-like resolution as an option in the highest-end line of laptops. And usually, it is not offered as standard even in the high-end products.
Two days ago, Samsung unveiled new laptops, the Galaxy Pro and the Galaxy Pro 360, thin and light models with AMOLED displays. And guess what? The displays are still Full HD only.
I have heard a possible explanation that higher resolutions on larger screens would make them far more expensive. I do not buy it, especially since there are 4K TVs, with screens far larger than any laptop, selling for as low as $250.
This is hugely disappointing, especially considering that the first MacBook Pro with Retina Display was released almost nine years ago. And that even the cheapest, lowest-end, phones have a screen resolution superior to Full HD.
The bottom line is, I can find a screen with a resolution superior to Full HD in (a) any Apple product, (b) any $200 phone, (c) most TVs, or (d) select high-end PC laptops, some of which will offer this only as an option but will not come standard.
Am I the only one really annoyed with this situation? Is it so hard to put a retina-like resolution in a laptop?
In June 2010, Steve Jobs introduced the iPhone 4 with Retina Display, which consisted of a 4-inch screen with a 960x640 resolution. According to Apple, the high pixel density (326 ppi) made individual pixels invisible to the human eye.
In June 2012, about two years later, Tim Cook introduced the first MacBook Pro with Retina Display, a 15.4-inch screen with a 2880x1800 resolution. In October 2012, the 13.3-inch MacBook Pro also received a Retina Display, with a 2560x1600 resolution. The iPad had already received a Retina Display a few months earlier.
The last Apple product to get a Retina Display was the iMac. The 27-incher got one in 2014, and the 21.5-incher, in 2015.
Smartphone manufacturers followed suit, and while they could not use the "Retina Display" trademark, shortly thereafter, they also started to offer high pixel densities in their screens.
In fact, I cannot recall the last time I saw a smartphone in which I could see the individual pixels. All models, including the cheap low-end ones, include a high-resolution display. I remember when I got a Moto Z Play, a medium-range phone launched in 2016, and it had a 1920x1080 resolution. Last year, I got a Galaxy S20 Plus, which had a 3040x1440 resolution in a 6.7-inch screen (which was far more than I needed).
Just take a look at Amazon.com and you will find a Galaxy A50 selling for $200, and it includes an AMOLED screen with a 2340x1080 resolution. Very cheap, and high pixel density.
High pixel density screens are in nearly every smartphone. But not in laptops.
In January 2016, I bought a Dell XPS 9550, which came with a 4K screen. It had a beautiful 15.6-inch display with a 3840x2160 resolution. I paid $1,900 for it.
I thought that these retina-like screens would become more popular in laptops over the years. Within 5 years, I thought, it would be in nearly every laptop. Nearly all smartphones already had retina-like screens by 2016, a few years after the iPhone got one, so it was just a matter of time. But it did not happen.
Now, we are in 2021. More than five years after I purchased my XPS 15, Dell still only offers a resolution higher than Full HD in its high-end XPS line of laptops. It never made into the Inspiron line.
But it is not only Dell. Nearly all manufacturers, with few exceptions, offer a retina-like resolution as an option in the highest-end line of laptops. And usually, it is not offered as standard even in the high-end products.
Two days ago, Samsung unveiled new laptops, the Galaxy Pro and the Galaxy Pro 360, thin and light models with AMOLED displays. And guess what? The displays are still Full HD only.
I have heard a possible explanation that higher resolutions on larger screens would make them far more expensive. I do not buy it, especially since there are 4K TVs, with screens far larger than any laptop, selling for as low as $250.
This is hugely disappointing, especially considering that the first MacBook Pro with Retina Display was released almost nine years ago. And that even the cheapest, lowest-end, phones have a screen resolution superior to Full HD.
The bottom line is, I can find a screen with a resolution superior to Full HD in (a) any Apple product, (b) any $200 phone, (c) most TVs, or (d) select high-end PC laptops, some of which will offer this only as an option but will not come standard.
Am I the only one really annoyed with this situation? Is it so hard to put a retina-like resolution in a laptop?