![]() The display’s color gamut was also very wide, at 100 percent of sRGB and 97 percent of AdobeRGB. The difference in contrast is so stark that it’s hard to represent in our usual chart. Compare that to a great IPS LCD display like the one on the Surface Book 2 that “only” hit 1400:1 and 428 nits. Brightness was excellent at 520 nits (we consider 300 nits to be our baseline), and contrast came in at a whopping 519,950:1. OLED displays are also bright, provide luscious colors, and enjoy vastly superior contrast over LCD panels.ĭoes the Spectre x360 15’s display live up to AMOLED’s promise? According to our colorimeter, it sure does. This has several effects, not the least of which is that a black OLED screen is truly off and completely dark. Why does OLED matter? Because unlike displays that shine a backlight through liquid crystal diodes (LCDs), every OLED element individually lights up. It deserves special attention.ĪMOLED stands for active matrix organic light-emitting diodes, but technical details aside it’s just Samsung’s version of OLED. But that didn’t seem right - this version of the Spectre x360 has one standout feature in its huge 15.6-inch AMOLED display manufactured by Samsung. We usually start our reviews with a laptop’s design and input options before getting to the display. But does the Spectre x360 15 offer enough power for the creative types who will most appreciate that gorgeous display? Mark Coppock/Digital Trends The display’s so good, it’s leading off ![]() HP’s reasoning is sound – OLED can use more power and impact battery life, thus justifying the more power-efficient CPU and GPU. If you want the “power” version with a 45-watt six-core Core i7-8750H CPU and Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050 Ti Max-Q GPU, then you’ll have to live with the standard IPS 4K panel that’s good but not great. HP made a conscious decision to ship the AMOLED display exclusively in the less powerful version of the Spectre x360 15. Dell XPS 13: the best tiny laptop?Īsus ZenBook S 13 Flip vs. ![]() Why the latest ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 8 isn’t worth the upgrade
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