Trust me I'm a perfectionist and I can see every teeny-tiny flaw.
The reason those pro screens cost so much is because their colour accuracy is greater. Do not confuse colour accuracy with uniformity. All displays including consumer ones like what Apple use in their products should be uniform.
My current 17" MBP uses a TN panel. Largely considered to be inferior to IPS based on viewing angles however the TN panel Apple used in this MBP has a 175 degree viewing angle and has no distortion when looking at the notebook from the sides. There is however slight distortion when looking at it from a lower elevation.
And sure you may not have time to keep returning your notebook (Ever consider pickups from work?) but for the price it is absoloutely ridiculous to settle for anything other than a working display especially when there are working ones available, I've seen them with my own eyes.
If the display had a yellow tint across the whole thing, meaning a uniform tint. I could live with that as my eyes would adjust to it or I could calibrate it myself using one of the many hardware calibrators. But it impossible to get used to a display that is milk white on one side and yellow on the other. And there is no way to calibrate such a display either.
I totally agree with you.
I've owned more monitors than i can count really, and I've never had this issue with non uniform coloring.
The worst screen I've had was probably on a ASUS Ultrabook, (UX31 or something like that) that screen had TERRIBLE viewing angles and had bleeding. But it still had a uniform color over the whole screen.
I will not settle for a screen that has a yellow tint in one corner, there is absolutely no way to fix something like that with calibration.
Sure its not a huge tint, but its enough for me to notice it.
And I did notice it immediately on the "Choose language screen".
Paying this much money for a computer, and settling for a un uniformed flawed screen, would really be beyond stupid imho.
Whats saying the problem wont get worse over time?
Many are arguing that they don't want LG screens, because over time it could perhaps possibly get IR, even if it don't have it now.
So they settle for a Samsung with a yellow tint in one corner, cause they don't want to "play the lotto" and get an LG, and possibly get problems after a year or two.
So whats saying that they yellow tint wont get worse over time, just as possibly the IR could get. (Still haven't seen proof of that occurring on the newer rev of the LG screens, that started life with no IR)
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Both my friend and I bought the higher-end speced 15-inch. Same day, same store at the Beverly Center. Most definitely the same batch.
We both have the same Samsung panel — I was able to check our machines with the terminal look up code after installing Xcode — and both machines are reacting completely differently.
My screen seems perfect. At least as far as I can tell. I agree with the posters saying that if you can't see a defect under normal operation, you shouldn't be worrying about it. I am pretty sure that if I were to take a magnifying glass, I'd find for example a dead pixel invisible to the naked eye or a quarter of an inch darker and that would drive me nuts knowing it's here.
I nonetheless changed the wallpaper to white and did an IR test, just to be safe and check for a biggy. It does looks perfect to me.
My friend's screen though : totally different story. There's a very pronounced change in backlighting on the bottom right corner. It looks super dimmed — we both clearly see it. That would actually bother me, it's visible on safari pages.
Also, mine doesn't creak. His does. Like severely. It almost feels like something is proper loose under the hood.
I told him to go get an exchange but he's worried it's gonna be the source of too much frustration and potential other flaws e.g. IR which the screen doesn't exhibit. (At least just yet)
At $2.6K a pop, if I were him, I'd take the laptop back and ask for a refund without specifying the reason as to avoid the condescending Genius Bar associate saying 'I don't see anything.' I'd go to a different store and buy another one the same day. (But that's just me. I dealt with the Genius Bar for my iPhone 5 last year and still have nightmares about it today. They are the worst in Los Angeles.)
What are the chances of his screen degrading over time for this particular problem. Is the dimmed area going to grow outward like IR would get more and more pronounced or is it just due to the lamination process meaning it's frozen in time?
This is exactly what I'm talking about.
I REALLY don't understand why people would be fine with a "broken" computer when they have payed a lot of money for it.
It just boggles my mind how any one could be fine with such a thing.