Again, the review clearly shows the shame of AMOLED when they try to attach high-frequency PWM to it - the drop in native contrast is immediately more than 100(!) times from the declared 1M:1. And what's the point of an AdobeRGB color coverage of 95%+ if this panel simply isn't calibrated with a dE of even less than 3, not to mention 2 or 1 for professionals. And as usual, gloss (but here it is inevitable with a touchscreen) and, as usual, color resolution does not correspond to the manufacturer's declarations, which is clearly visible from the subpixel structure.
As a result, we get a screen on which it is impossible to work with color even semi-professionally. Glare, with poor color resolution and mediocre contrast for OLED - more than 125 times worse than expected. Unless the PWM is high enough so as not to strain your eyes too much. But in total we get a mediocre OLED screen, despite outstanding color reproduction...
And HP just killed this series with an idiotic keyboard without a numpad, although the dimensions easily allow you to add a full-fledged one, it's 15.6
We get neither this nor that.
And USB40 on Zen3 requires a separate USB40 controller and retimer, because... in Zen3 (and +) they simply weren't there. Only external. Well, HP was just greedy with this, despite the rather high price.
It's up to the buyer to decide whether he needs this...
Quote from: Benji on September 30, 2023, 17:06:26Dieses "Zertifikat" ist somit, ebenso wie "Dolby Atmos" bei Smartphones und Laptops, nur ein Label, um Geld zwischen mehreren Unternehmen umher zu schieben.
In reality, Dolby licensed the only proper Dolby Headphone in Windows XP. It is there, after patching the Realtek drivers, that you can enable true surround sound that goes beyond your head in decent (highly sensitive) headphones. Starting with Vista+, Dolby has revoked the license to use DH in Realtek drivers. And what they and other manufacturers of sound chips and drivers for them are left with is a pitiful semblance of normal DH, as in Windows XP with a license (for some motherboards and laptops) or a driver patch (available since 2012). The only way to get high-quality surround sound in headphones is to use PowerDVD or its plugins (an archive with installable DH plugins and other HRTF options is available on the Internet) from version 13 in 32 bit mode only. They can be connected to players such as MPC-HC/BE/PotPlayer.
But unfortunately, these plugins only decode basic (E)AC3/DTS tracks. And the patched driver in XP is omnivorous, it doesn't care what is supplied to the input - the main thing is that it is multi-channel sound at 5.1+ level to generate spatial sound in headphones.
It's not surprising, but paid Dloby Atmos was not even close, with these old drivers for XP. And unfortunately, I don't know how to provide the same level of surround sound in W7+. I don't know of any external or internal sound cards with the same DH option as in the XP drivers for sale. Apparently no one has them. Therefore, today there are 2 options - either install XP and watch a movie there, with any audio track, or use PowerDVD or its plugins for W7+, but it is not so omnivorous and its interface is many times less flexible than that of MPCHC/BE/PotPlayer. Especially when watching movies on projectors.