DisplayMate ran a battery of comparative tests on the Nexus One's AMOLED screen, and came away with a damning list of issues:
• The Nexus One only uses 16 bit color, which means that 'Red and Blue only have 32 possible intensity levels and Green only has 64 possible intensity levels,' as compared to the iPhone and others, which have at least 256 intensity levels for each color. Result: That horrible banding you see above.
• Android's sub-pixel rendering is great for icons and text, but terrible for images. Photos are 'rendered poorly and inaccurately, with over-saturated colors, bad color and gray-scale accuracy, large color and gray-scale tracking errors, calibration errors, lots of image noise from excessive edge and sharpness processing, and many artifacts.' Result: Blown-out areas in photographs, image noise, and general gaudiness in colorful images.
• The display's peak white brightness is oddly low. Result: It's hard to see the screen when used outdoors. (This, for what it's worth, we already knew.)
There's a lot more to digest on in DisplayMate's post, and the effect is actually worse than portrayed in their images, or ours above, since by the time you see them, they've been photographed, re-saved and redisplayed on another display. And the results aren't trivial: in the right kind of photograph, there is significant color banding on the Nexus One, where there wouldn't be on virtually any other SmartPhone.
The AMOLED screen is gorgeous, and all the colors pop to the point that it makes both the iPhone 3GS and the Droid look washed out. It's really, really good.Here's the thing: This is still true. HTC and Google likely made a conscious decision to sacrifice color fidelity, outdoor viewability, and maybe even touch accuracy for a screen that, experientially speaking, blows everything else out of the water. And depending on how anal you are, this is probably fine.
The question for all the Nexus One owners is a psychological one: Now that you know about the display's flaws, do you still like your SmartPhone?
Share your thoughts, and comments with us.
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