Quote from: NikoB on November 19, 2023, 21:00:14You both need medical attention. After all, both of you are either paid bots or idiots. I hope adequate people understand who you both are, so you will have to change your nicknames. But I don't. So, in general, the goal has been achieved.Lol the "audience" you are trying to appeal to here exists only in your head, man. As you were told before,
Quote from: Neenyah on November 18, 2023, 17:04:08Seek professional help, seriously.
Quote from: NikoB on November 18, 2023, 16:55:15true HDR standards (which HDR10 implements in practice) only work on OLED screensAnother bs from a person who clearly never knew what DisplayHDR is and thinks HDR10 is an image quality certification.
Quote from: NikoB on November 18, 2023, 16:55:15Asus, to its shame, has itself signed that their OLED screen is of poor quality; moreover, it is not intended for professional work with color, as the author of the review proved.Seek professional help, seriously.
Quote from: A on November 18, 2023, 13:27:47I don't know if I can laugh at you or you have a real medical diagnosis and laughing at you is bad.😅🖤
Quote from: NikoB on November 18, 2023, 12:32:58HDR10 (Static HDR metadata) places stringent demands on the screen.No, lol. It's just a video stream data format.
Quote from: NikoB on November 17, 2023, 17:20:54there is no HDR10 certificate (despite AMOLED)HDR10 is not a certificate, it's content type for TVs and video signal sources. You get HDR10 when you can send or receive specific stream data format. RTX2060 is HDR10+ lol.
Quote from: NikoB on November 17, 2023, 12:42:55Brightness is less than 400 nits, despite the fact that fake support for HDR600 (and this NOT HDR10 support) is declared, which requires a minimum of 600 nits.'HDR600 True Black' certification requires 350 nits across the display and 600 nits in 10% patch, which this display (ATNA60BX01) is capable of, which is mentioned in reviews of other laptops with the same OLED panel.
Quote from: NikoB on November 16, 2023, 21:51:09Stupid Asus trolls don't understand that the author, with a "perfect" screen, for some reason did hardware calibration and got a terrible result, even worse than on a screen with 45% NTSC!
QuoteThe different display modes on the Asus Zenbook Pro 16X ensure accurate color representation. In native mode, the display has an average color deviation of ΔΕ2000 3.36 (DisplayP3 target color space). The DisplayP3 preset from Asus ensures a very low color deviation of only ΔΕ2000 1.58 in the same color space. This means that even a trained eye is unlikely to notice any color differences.
Quote from: NikoB on November 16, 2023, 21:51:09Stupid trolls don't know that color rendition fades over time, especially on a lousy AMOLED, and you still need to recalibrate. Not to mention that professionals always do it, never trusting the factory settings. And when they recalibrate, they will get a terrible result.Your own brain fades away much faster though, actually it's gone already so who do you blame there for that?