News:

Willkommen im Notebookcheck.com Forum! Hier können sie über alle unsere Artikel und allgemein über Notebook relevante Dinge disuktieren. Viel Spass!

Main Menu

Post reply

The message has the following error or errors that must be corrected before continuing:
Warning: this topic has not been posted in for at least 120 days.
Unless you're sure you want to reply, please consider starting a new topic.
Other options
Verification:
Please leave this box empty:

Shortcuts: ALT+S post or ALT+P preview

Topic summary

Posted by Neenyah
 - May 02, 2024, 11:22:33
Every OLED is using PWM.

Also here from the review:
QuoteScreen flickering / PWM detected   480 Hz
Posted by bobby_G
 - May 02, 2024, 11:14:52
I'd like to hear an answer to this, too. Same experience for me. *DOES* the screen use PWM? HP Support also told me it doesn't. Comparing two screens side by side - the Spectre shows clear flicker vs other screen (apple Retina). Both are supposedly "flicker free."

Does anyone know definitively? 
Posted by SiteForSoreEyes
 - April 03, 2024, 15:41:31
Seen a couple of people mention the grainy overlay from the touch screen. It's really obvious and distracting on my machine and makes everything look low res / blurry. Far worse, though, is the flicker. As soon as I look at the screen I can feel my eyes getting strained and after a couple of minutes they're so blurry I can't see. Lasts a worryingly long time, too. Obviously not happy, given how expensive it was.

HP told me that a) the screen is flicker-free and b) it doesn't use PWM. I've never had an issue on any screen on any device ever until this one. So...what gives?
Posted by toto1234
 - March 09, 2024, 18:23:59
I don't understand how reviews can differ so much from real life experience.

I own this laptop and my experience is pretty bad so far.

"extremely quiet companion overall"
I call bullshit on that, my desktop computer with AiO and geforce 4070 is quieter when doing web surfing and office work.
The fan is noisy, just like the previous model (I used to have the Spectre 14 from 2021)

The battery life is also bullshit, you can divide the results by 2 for real life experience.

And as for the screen, HP advertises it as being flicker free, so that's basically a lie.

Overall, I'm pretty disappointed with my purchase.
Posted by Kindera
 - March 04, 2024, 21:50:02
Quote from: Jas on February 20, 2024, 05:15:38Anyone know about laptops with touchscreen OLEDs that do not have a grainy digitizer? I wouldn't know where to even search for something like that.

Maybe the Samsung laptops from this year. Their tab S8/s9 ultra has a high quality OLED panel without the cheap crap overlay mesh. Hopefully they have used the same high end panels in their laptops. It really annoys me how almost no reviewers mention this obvious problem with almost every touch screen OLED laptop. All the screen look obviously grainy!
[/quote]

I've always liked Samsung displays but they don't have a good reputation when it comes to their laptop reliability mainly because of their design flaws.

Can anyone validate if this new HP flagship has a hazy screen or not because of it's digitizer?
[/quote]

Returning mine because of the screen door effect caused by the digitizer.
Hoping the Samsung book4 pro might be better, but not sure because the specs mention amoled and not super amoled. Anyone first hand experience with this lineup?
Posted by HW
 - February 21, 2024, 12:47:56
MyHP is a native installed APP ,pinned on Taskbar as default :)
Posted by DontFearTheFuture
 - February 21, 2024, 12:32:34
Quote from: HW on February 21, 2024, 11:04:45HP does offer its own power settings in fact.
Launch pre-install App , MyHP\Device\System control...It supports Performance, Balance, Quiet....Modes

Search Youtube "2024 HP Spectre x360 14: 30-Days Later" by Andrew Marc David
Launching  System Control  at 43m:00s.

Enjoy!

Maybe this needs to be installed to get the full performance out of this machine. Because something seems off based on the fact this machine only gets a Cinebench Multicore of 10,333 @ 24 watts when all others seem to get a score of 13,000 @ 28 watts.
Posted by HW
 - February 21, 2024, 11:04:45
HP does offer its own power settings in fact.
Launch pre-install App , MyHP\Device\System control...It supports Performance, Balance, Quiet....Modes

Search Youtube "2024 HP Spectre x360 14: 30-Days Later" by Andrew Marc David
Launching  System Control  at 43m:00s.

Enjoy!
Posted by Jas
 - February 20, 2024, 05:15:38
 Anyone know about laptops with touchscreen OLEDs that do not have a grainy digitizer? I wouldn't know where to even search for something like that.

[/quote]
Maybe the Samsung laptops from this year. Their tab S8/s9 ultra has a high quality OLED panel without the cheap crap overlay mesh. Hopefully they have used the same high end panels in their laptops. It really annoys me how almost no reviewers mention this obvious problem with almost every touch screen OLED laptop. All the screen look obviously grainy!
[/quote]

I've always liked Samsung displays but they don't have a good reputation when it comes to their laptop reliability mainly because of their design flaws.

Can anyone validate if this new HP flagship has a hazy screen or not because of it's digitizer?
Posted by Don't Fear the Future
 - February 20, 2024, 02:23:56
Quote from: indy on February 18, 2024, 20:08:22Interesting how people jump to biased conclusions about test results, without looking at differences in testing methodologies.

I agree.  People will jump to conclusions, as they may not know all the ways a device can be tested or such.

However, there is very consistent data around the web showing that an Intel 155H running at its base TDP of 28 Watts generally gets a score of 13,000 on the last run of a Stress Test of Cinebench R23; not a 1 run Best Score.  Therefore, a sustained score of 13,000; a 1 run test will obviously be higher than this.

The HP Spectre in this review at 24 watts (instead of 28 watts) is somehow only getting a score of 10,333 in Cinebench R23.  It just doesn't add up.  This has happened to other reviews too regarding these new Intel 155H chips in a variety of laptops; however, reviewer have stated that after Bios or Driver updates the performance of these devices had improved to more predictable / expected levels.

To be clear, I'm not blaming NotebookCheck for their Testing methods. I just strongly feel that something has to be off with the Bios or such that's affecting the score, which has plagued other reviewers too.  It just seems to have happened more here at Notebookcheck as of late.

Personally, Notebookcheck is my go-to place for laptops reviews and tests.  For me, they are the best.  However, I also watch other reviews on YouTube of the same products, as I feel as a consumer it is best to get your information from more than just one source.  For me, this is how you truly learn the ins and outs of something.
Posted by Abc
 - February 20, 2024, 02:04:11
Quote from: f x86 on February 18, 2024, 11:16:03
Quote from: Apatel on February 18, 2024, 05:14:48Your own MSI prestige 16 155H review showed great perf and battery life (almost MB2 pro level). It showed better perf and battery life (even after accouting for its larger battery size) than most 7840U/7840HS.
x86 laptop battery life mostly depends on how much a specific manufacturer and/or reviewer cuts laptop performance on battery, not real consumption.
Also reviewers can blatantly cheat, e.g. by making screen 20% dimmer you can get up to x1.5 battery life.

Yes. There are a lot of variation between manufacturers for the non-core consumption. For example, you can optimize your board design to put RAM next to the CPU, or you can route it around the board to a separate area. Everything is 0.1W, 0.2W difference but it can add up. Some SSDs can consume 2x the power at peak gen4 performance than others. Also things like turning off unused PCIe lanes. Etc etc. Some manufacturers work harder than others. Also depends on the product segment. A $1500 product does not receive the same treatment as the $150 product. Some lower price products are ODM manufactured with a logo sticker. Etc etc.

Also interesting you mentioned screen brightness. Notebook Check is the only reviewer who said they test at 150 nit brightness. I think it was either Toms or PC mag who test at 50% brightness. Obviously not every laptop has the same 50% brightness, but also even two laptops with 300 nit screens can have different brightness curves that 50% isn't 150 nit.

So yes these other reviewers are really not being objective enough.
Posted by Ayohw
 - February 19, 2024, 10:30:23
Quote from: Jas on February 19, 2024, 04:17:54
Quote from: Ayohw on February 18, 2024, 21:12:39No mention of the obvious graininess visible on the OLED screen. HP continues to use a cheap touch layer overlay deisgn for their OLED screens which leaves a visible wire mesh that makes the screen look low resolution with light colours such as a white background. It is very obvious and I do not know why reviews always not mention this. I have looked at this laptop in person and the OLED screen looks crap!
Anyone know about laptops with touchscreen OLEDs that do not have a grainy digitizer? I wouldn't know where to even sear for something like that.


Maybe the Samsung laptops from this year. Their tab S8/s9 ultra has a high quality OLED panel without the cheap crap overlay mesh. Hopefully they have used the same high end panels in their laptops. It really annoys me how almost no reviewers mention this obvious problem with almost every touch screen OLED laptop. All the screen look obviously grainy!
Posted by Jas
 - February 19, 2024, 04:17:54
Quote from: Ayohw on February 18, 2024, 21:12:39No mention of the obvious graininess visible on the OLED screen. HP continues to use a cheap touch layer overlay deisgn for their OLED screens which leaves a visible wire mesh that makes the screen look low resolution with light colours such as a white background. It is very obvious and I do not know why reviews always not mention this. I have looked at this laptop in person and the OLED screen looks crap!
Anyone know about laptops with touchscreen OLEDs that do not have a grainy digitizer? I wouldn't know where to even sear for something like that.
Posted by Ayohw
 - February 18, 2024, 21:12:39
No mention of the obvious graininess visible on the OLED screen. HP continues to use a cheap touch layer overlay deisgn for their OLED screens which leaves a visible wire mesh that makes the screen look low resolution with light colours such as a white background. It is very obvious and I do not know why reviews always not mention this. I have looked at this laptop in person and the OLED screen looks crap!
Posted by indy
 - February 18, 2024, 20:08:22
Interesting how people jump to biased conclusions about test results, without looking at differences in testing methodologies.