I said: ...with the benchmark that Apple put out of 300 ppi at a distance of ~11"...
You read it, then you say:
You need to reread your stuff more than 5 times to make sure it sticks.
You seem to have overlooked the part where you said "Apple's benchmark seems to have ended up with the iPhone, with 326 ppi at an average distance of 10"."
Whoops. And you just pulled the 10" number out of your behind. Apple says 11" and somehow you wind up with 10. Don't you just love it when people make things up as they go along?
I never pulled any number out of anyone's behind. I used it as a simple example for people like you to show how a device that is effectively an in between device such as the Nexus could have its Retina ppi determined at an in between distance: in between 10 and 15". I never asserted anything, including that people would in fact hold the device that far from their face.
The problem is, you did just pull a number out of your behind. If you didn't then show me the source from whence it came. You'll have to do better than just saying the Nexus is in between the iPhone and iPad, so you put it in the middle and divided by two. That makes no sense and is not mathematically accurate. Since you said you didn't pull it out of your behind, then I'm sure you must have a link with some hard facts showing the distance and ppi the Nexus would have to have. I'll wait on the link
But from everyone measured here in the office the numbers are spot on. What about other people though? Turns out, some other people are saying the 10" for the iPhone and the 15" for the iPad are close and even spot on... that people do hold the device that far from their face, and even farther. Pretty flat out stupid, eh!
So now you're going around conducting surveys, measuring the distance people hold their phones? LMAO Get out of here with that nonsense. LMAO
FYI, if you look on the web, you will find it is quite normal for people to hold a tablet 18" or more away from their faces.
Gizmodo for example, states between 15-18, and there are other sites that suggest even more than 18". It really isn't hard for a tablet to be held almost 2 feet away from the face.
https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/1336685/
Trying even to illustrate something in the simplest of terms is still even to complicated for you. Let's learn the A, B, Cs again.
A. The larger the screen, the farther it's held from your face.
B. The Nexus 7 has a bigger screen than the iPhone, and a smaller screen than the iPad.
A+B= the Nexus 7 is held farther from the face than the iPhone, and closer than the iPad. If the iPad has a known value (264 ppi), we can deduce that the Nexus 7 must have a greater number of ppi than the iPad under Apple's Retina scale. That this must be the case. Therefore, the 216 ppi that the Nexus 7 has right now does not qualify as a Retina display because its pixels are not dense enough at the distance it would be held from the face (more than 10" and less than 15").
And THAT is your problem right there. You deduction is based on a fallacy. Just because the screen is 7" doesn't mean it inherently must be held at a closer distance.
Now here's where I destroy the very basis of your argument...you ready? Read on. You're asserting that the Nexus 7 has to be head at a closer proximity because it isn't as large as the iPad. HOWEVER,
Displaymate, like Gizmodo, show the typical viewing distance of the iPad to be 15"-18". They show the typical viewing distance for the iPhone to be 12"-15". So if the typical viewing distance between the 3.5" display of the iPhone and the 9.7" display of the iPad, can differ as slightly as 3" (the difference between 15 and 18), there's no reason for you to ASSUME, the Nexus 7 has to be held any closer than the iPad.
To reduce you to absurdity, and to keep things really dead simple:
Using Apple's benchmark of 300 ppi at 11": if the Nexus were held at 11" from the face, it would need 300 ppi to qualify as a Retina. It has 216 ppi, 84 ppi short. If it were held an extra inch from the face, at 12"... 1 foot... which is "just stupid! and can't be so!... nobody would hold it that far from their face!..."
It would need slightly less ppi. On your incredulous take... people will hold the Nexus 7 closer to their face... which means that anything under 11" will mean the ppi will have to increase, ever widening the gap between the 216 ppi that it currently has and the 300+ that it'll need.
Perhaps it is YOU that should re-read. I never said 12" was too far. It's too CLOSE for a tablet. Learn to read with comprehension.
Well, by now you probably are fuming... so I'll save you the embarrassment other than to say that 15" is the benchmark distance Apple set for the iPad 3 and has it at 264 ppi.
Full stop. At a normal distance 10" as in the iPhone, 264 ppi does NOT qualify as a Retina display as calculated using the equation Apple itself endorses.
http://apple.stackexchange.com/ques...most-pixels-of-any-tablets-displa/44222#44222
Wrong. Apple NEVER came out and gave a definition for retina in the iPad. Now you're just pulling stories out of your behind. You little link is quite cute, but it still fails to show what the minimum benchmark is at a particular distance. It merely goes off of what was stated about the iPhone. UNFORTUNATELY, that has no bearing on the iPad with a different ppi and viewing distance. So until you show a link that matter-of-factly states what the MINIMUM ppi is at a certain distance (particularly one up to 18"), then you have failed.
A child is schooled once again.
Yes, you have once again been trounced. Now stop embarrassing yourself.
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The average human eye at the normal distance the Nexus is held from the eyes can discern the individual pixels. This is a fact. You are the exception. And I doubt anyone on here would believe you anyway: you are motivated not by truth but to simply argue.
Fact? If it's fact, then you shouldn't be having so much trouble finding the proof. Show the proof or close your mouth.