Where to preorder the Apple iPad Pro (2024):
The new iPad Pro got announced at the May 7 "Let Loose" event — and it's got the highly anticipated OLED display that Apple is calling "Tandem OLED" for an "Ultra Retina XDR" screen.
Why is it called Tandem OLED? It's got two OLED displays put together, which outputs a super high contrast screen for true, deep blacks. Plus, the Tandem OLED display yields incredible brightness, too (1,600 nits peak brightness, to be specific).
If you're not a screen snob, you may be wondering, "Why should I care about an OLED display?" That's a fair question, so let's run down the benefits of an OLED display so that you can make a decision on whether the new iPad Pro is right for you.
SEE ALSO: iPad Pro 2024 now has 'Tandem OLED': 5 reasons this is a big dealOLED, which stands for Organic Light Emitting Diodes, consists of organic electroluminescent materials that glow when electricity passes through them. Each pixel on an OLED display has its own individual light source. In other words, as PCWorld puts it, each pixel can be turned off completely, "providing a deep, inky, perfect black level."
This is what makes an OLED display more advantageous than, say, the mini-LED display featured on the previous-generation iPad Pro. Instead of per-pixel lighting, mini-LED displays have about 3,000 lighting zones (compare that to the OLED's eight million).
TechRadar explained it perfectly:
"Imagine the whole screen entirely black, save for a single pixel out of eight million in pure, bright white – because that’s totally doable on an OLED. On a Mini LED set, it’s not even close: in a 4K panel with around 3,000 lighting zones, each backlight zone would actually drive around 2,700 pixels."
As you'll find out in the next section, this provides OLED displays with more benefits compared to the mini-LED screen on the last-generation iPad Pro (and the LCD panel on the iPad Air).
Streaming is one of the many reasons people purchase an iPad. It's a comfortable way to cuddle up at night and watch your favorite shows without an uncomfortable keyboard jutting out in front of you.
As such, if streaming is a use case for you, there's a good chance that having a tablet that's the equivalent of eye candy is important. If so, you'll appreciate the benefits of an OLED display on an iPad.
Some users of the iPad Pro 2022, which features a mini-LED display, experienced something called "blooming" or the "halo effect."
You can see it happening around the Apple logo in Josh Teder's X post below.
Tweet may have been deleted
To put it succinctly, blooming is light leakage. This phenomenon occurs when non-black UI elements are illuminated from behind via a backlight, causing the light to seep into the surrounding black UI, as 9to5Mac explained.
However, with OLED, this shouldn't be an issue because, again, when something needs to be black, those pixels will be turned off entirely — not dimmed.
As aforementioned, OLED displays can completely extinguish light from pixels, allowing the screen to achieve perfect black levels when it's appropriate — something mini-LED and LCD displays can't do.
Thanks to self-lighting pixels that, again, can be totally turned off independently, OLED displays should deliver better contrast than mini-LED screens.
This provides a stark distinction between the true blacks and the other colors that are being emitted on the screen.
This won't matter much when you're using an iPad for yourself, but if your partner is peering over to see what you're watching, they may get a better viewing angle on an OLED display compared to mini-LED and LCD screens.
Why?
According to PCWorld, an LCD screen, for example, can control specific pixels by using liquid crystals to block their light. This can cause images to look different from different angles because liquid crystals do not obstruct light evenly.
Plus, they "require a few milliseconds to respond to a charge, causing blur or ghosting in rapidly changing image."
With the new iPad Pro, we expect better motion performance. OLED displays offer smoother, more seamless transition between frames compared to LCD technology. As such, they're known for delivering zippier response times and better motion-blur management.
We don't know whether the OLED iPad Pro, indeed, has a leg up over its predecessor in these five areas, but we'll let you know when we get the tablet in for review.
One thing, however, we must warn you about when it comes to OLED displays is that they are known for causing burn-in, a permanent issue in which a faint image from the screen is "burned" into the panel — even though the image isn't being displayed anymore.
Let's hope that Apple has found a way to mitigate this risk by employing some clever techniques.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
iPad Pro 2024 now has OLED: 5 reasons this is a big deal-书香门户网
sitemap
文章
28
浏览
42
获赞
3
No, this doesn't mean that Joe Biden owns antifa.com
Supporters of President Donald Trump went nuts online Wednesday after they discovered that the domaiZoom update hides Meeting IDs to protect users from hackers
When it comes to securing your video calls from hackers and spammers, Zoom knows it set its users upSophie Turner and Joe Jonas perform fake makeout session for the cameras and yeah it's a lot
Not everyone's a fan of public displays of affection. But, this flamboyant mock PDA between Sophie TPush notification ads on iPhones are coming, but there’s a silver lining
If there's one place I really, really don't want to see ads, it's the push notifications on my phoneHow to check if your mail
If your mail-in ballot is cast, but no one is around to count it, did it make a sound? The U.S. presBest desktop companions to make working from home less lonely
Remember desktop pets? In the very early days of the web, they came in many forms (cats, ants, cockrMoto G Power, with massive battery for only $249, is available for preorder
Motorola made two affordable phones available for pre-order today: The Moto G Power and the Moto G SMeryl Streep's strong reaction at the U.S. Open is totally going to be a meme
Meryl Streep, celebrated actor, meme queen, and unabashed tennis tragic, has pulled out another highApril the giraffe is going on birth control
After having five children in her just 17 years on earth, April the giraffe is ready to go on birthSophie Turner and Joe Jonas perform fake makeout session for the cameras and yeah it's a lot
Not everyone's a fan of public displays of affection. But, this flamboyant mock PDA between Sophie TElon Musk's coronavirus tweets somehow don't violate Twitter's rules
Elon Musk has some thoughtsabout the coronavirus — thoughts that, naturally, the Tesla CEO decEric Trump tweets that he hates ‘disloyal people’ and is swiftly reminded of his own family
Is there anyone among us who truly LOVES disloyal people? Not Eric Trump, that's for sure!We know thTrudeau, Johnson, and other NATO leaders caught on video apparently gossiping about Trump
For anyone whose job is to keep a straight face around Donald Trump, dozens of private conversationsOkCupid now has a dedicated space for preferred pronouns
Personal pronouns are important as they play a vital part in acknowledging and respecting people's rMeryl Streep's strong reaction at the U.S. Open is totally going to be a meme
Meryl Streep, celebrated actor, meme queen, and unabashed tennis tragic, has pulled out another high