Which display setting do you use (screen calibration)
I use sRGB. Everything else just looks like a psychedelic color-fest.
Using DCI3
P3. Better color range and suits my hd
video needs and helps display every color my camera captures. wonder how adaptive mode does tho
Just default with the temp set a little cooler
I'm using adaptive my self. I found default too saturated for my tastes and both srgb and dci-p3 caused yellowish whites. Adaptive has neither issue for me.
Edit - switched to dci-p3 after a few days and qiickly getting used to the warmer whites. Adaptive changed before my eyes a few times and it was a little jarring tbh.
Related
I know there is a BRIGHTNESS setting for the TP2's screen, but is there a CONTRAST setting anywhere? Any screen that has a black or dark color to it is not as sharp (on my phone, anyway) as my TP1 (Fuze). A sharper black will make all colors appear more brilliant and sharper. Is there a way to adjust the CONTRAST -- whether by a control setting or a registry tweak? Any help would be appreciated. Thanks to all in advance!
The screen has neither a brightness nor a contrast control in the normally-accepted sense of those terms. What it has is the ability to vary the intensity of the backlight, which is quite different. Even if it did have a contrast control, that would affect whites, not blacks. If black is not dark enough then your only option is to make the backlight dimmer. That, of course, will have no effect on sharpness.
Hi all. I've seen this feature in the first note and now I see it again.
Adjusting tone save the energy saver based on image analysis
Is this option really make a difference?
h t t p://imageshack.us/f/202/20130221221021.png
No 10 posts so sorry for link
I always have it set to off. I had it on but never noticed any difference. My guess is that if you are looking at a very colorful image, prolly the screen will lighten more up or over-saturate the colors to look nicer. Maybe even the brightness who knows.
According to a cnet article:
" There's another adjustment on the Note 2 to that significantly affects picture quality. Samsung applied the cryptic moniker "Auto adjust screen tone" (AAST) to a check box at the bottom of the Display menu. Uncheck it and the phone's full light output capabilities are unshackled, nearly doubling its contrast ratio and improving its ability to compete with ambient light. Turning off AAST also improves color accuracy slightly. "
Seems like changes the colour tone of brighter colours to reduce their brightness.
I keep it on since I like milder screens.
If you prefer low brightness and want to save power , keep it on.
If you find yourself using high brightness often, turn it off.
Sent from my GT-N7100
HypoDest said:
According to a cnet article:
" There's another adjustment on the Note 2 to that significantly affects picture quality. Samsung applied the cryptic moniker "Auto adjust screen tone" (AAST) to a check box at the bottom of the Display menu. Uncheck it and the phone's full light output capabilities are unshackled, nearly doubling its contrast ratio and improving its ability to compete with ambient light. Turning off AAST also improves color accuracy slightly. "
Seems like changes the colour tone of brighter colours to reduce their brightness.
I keep it on since I like milder screens.
If you prefer low brightness and want to save power , keep it on.
If you find yourself using high brightness often, turn it off.
Sent from my GT-N7100
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks you for info.
As topic says, what color settings are you using? Any of the preset profiles or your own expert settings? I have been playing around with the settings in the expert mode, but can't really find anything that looks better than the auto setting.
If you are using your custom expert settings, please post a screenshot of it here.
According to some reviews I've read, Expert with the warmth cranked all the way up was the "most accurate". I didn't really like how this looked as it just made the display look more red, not necessarily "warmer". I settled on Expert with the Red and Blue sliders dialed back one notch. I also cranked up the saturation one step and dialed back the sharpness slightly. This resulted in a bit of a warmer and sharper image that I'm content with but I really miss KCAL.
EDIT: Anandtech just released their review of this phone. They recommend that you use the "Expert" Color settings and turn the blue slider all the way down. It looks better but the display is still way too blue.
I use Expert.
Color Temperature is at 50%.
Red is at 100%.
Green is at 100%.
Blue is at 50%.
Saturation is at 100%
Hue is at 50%.
Sharpness is at 50%.
Color Filter is set to off.
I use Expert. Im searching a better black
Color Temperature is at 100%.
Red is at 0%.
Green is at 100%.
Blue is at 0%.
Saturation is at 100%
Hue is at 75%.
Sharpness is at 75%.
Color Filter is set to off.
try it!
Using expert
Saturation 50%
Hue 25%
Sharpness 0
Color temperature 75%
Red 50%
Green 75%
Blue 25%
This is what looks best to my eyes after time spent fiddling with it.
Auto with Comfort View "always on".
Now that and if I switch off comfort view or look at other phones I can clearly figure out the "blueness". The comfort view on the G7 is an excellent setting and something users should use of a couple of hours and feel the difference.
What makes color filer
What's your lcd display?
1) dial *#*#64663#*#*
2) Version Information
3) Check under "TP:"
Mine is EBBG
Also, is there a way to adjust color temperature? I wish we had the color temperature settings for warm or cool displays
EBBG, too.
I like having on the night light mode all the time. I don't like the blue color all phones have.
Same here and I also think it's a little bit cold. But having night mode on all the time? Way too warm for me....
I had this also and my colors here is somehow slightly warm compared to my xperia z lcd
rfkd said:
Same here and I also think it's a little bit cold. But having night mode on all the time? Way too warm for me....
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Click to collapse
You can set the intensity. It's better for your eyes (or that's what they say). And you get used to it in a few hours But it's personal preference.
adriakus said:
You can set the intensity. It's better for your eyes (or that's what they say). And you get used to it in a few hours But it's personal preference.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How to set intensity?
Just go to settings/display/night light. There is a slider there.
I also placed a shortcut in the quick tiles so I can turn it off if I want to and get to the slider.
If you get root and Kernel Adiutor, (maybe necessary to flash new kernel), you can set through kernel native RGB, saturation options, etc. It's called KCAL color calibration. There are posts at xda with even different profiles (think like 'how to turn lcd into amoled'). I don't have the A2, but since reviews complain about blue tint and lack of display calibration as in MIUI I thought this could be the solution for AO.
I also complain from this ****, I compred color temperature to my friend's phone (with miui)
And I found a huge difference in color temperature!!
Does anyone know how to turn off the s20's adaptive display feature? (I'm not asking about adaptive brightness.) I'm on a US snapdragon, unlocked, regular S20. Thanks!
I am referring to:
"Samsung's adaptive super AMOLED screen optimizes the color range, saturation, and sharpness of the picture depending on what you're watching or doing."
https://www.samsung.com/us/support/answer/ANS00063051/
The vivid/natural, white balance, and advanced RGB settings mentioned in that link do NOT seem to impact the adaptive display feature. (And in fact, white balance and RGB settings don't seem to do anything at all... If anyone has thoughts about why THAT is, or how to make them actually have an effect, I'm interested.)
I have tried turning off dark mode completely, turning off the video enhancer, and turning off the dark mode on wallpaper, but the problem persists and impacts things like apps and pages in Chrome - basically everything.
If I look at my task switcher, app screens will often look the way I want them to in the preview, but when I click on one, after about a second the display adjusts and changes the image to something brighter, whiter, and less what I want. This is true whether adaptive brightness is on OR off.
I'm trying to use a screen filter to manually set the screen to the settings I need, and it feels like the screen is fighting the filter and countering it, and I think this business with the adaptive display optimizing color and saturation could be the problem. Or if you have other ideas for the source of the problem, I want to hear them.
Any help is appreciated!
Erre én is k
dovesong said:
Does anyone know how to turn off the s20's adaptive display feature? (I'm not asking about adaptive brightness.) I'm on a US snapdragon, unlocked, regular S20. Thanks!
I am referring to:
"Samsung's adaptive super AMOLED screen optimizes the color range, saturation, and sharpness of the picture depending on what you're watching or doing."
https://www.samsung.com/us/support/answer/ANS00063051/
The vivid/natural, white balance, and advanced RGB settings mentioned in that link do NOT seem to impact the adaptive display feature. (And in fact, white balance and RGB settings don't seem to do anything at all... If anyone has thoughts about why THAT is, or how to make them actually have an effect, I'm interested.)
I have tried turning off dark mode completely, turning off the video enhancer, and turning off the dark mode on wallpaper, but the problem persists and impacts things like apps and pages in Chrome - basically everything.
If I look at my task switcher, app screens will often look the way I want them to in the preview, but when I click on one, after about a second the display adjusts and changes the image to something brighter, whiter, and less what I want. This is true whether adaptive brightness is on OR off.
I'm trying to use a screen filter to manually set the screen to the settings I need, and it feels like the screen is fighting the filter and countering it, and I think this business with the adaptive display optimizing color and saturation could be the problem. Or if you have other ideas for the source of the problem, I want to hear them.
Any help is appreciated!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
they removed the option to close adaptive display since Note 9 starting from s10 it is always on and can't be disabled
They removed the option to close adaptive display since Note 9 starting from s10 it is always on and can't be disabled
It was something like attached picture on Note 9
Ah hah! I think I figured out a solution to my problem (which was that the whites were too blue and bright and vivid as compared to everything else on the screen, no matter what settings I used on Twilight or another screen filtering app). For anyone who comes after me with a similar issue: the native blue light filter doesn't JUST turn on/off - it has an opacity setting which you can find and adjust by clicking on "blue light filter" in your display settings menu, to the left of the on/off toggle switch. Turning it all the way up (to the right) tones down the whites and blues without impacting the rest of the colors on the screen, which for me at least creates a much better color display ratio.