Quote from: Benjamin Herzig on February 03, 2023, 00:34:25OR a different screen technology like microLED that might be more power efficient
news.mit.edu/2023/vertical-stacked-color-microscopic-leds-0201
Quote from: Benjamin Herzig on February 03, 2023, 00:34:25If you have a 4K screen and just set it to FHD, you don't change anything about this factor. Even if the screen displays a picture in FHD resolution, the underlying hardware is still a power hungry LED backlight for a 4K screen.
Quote from: Benjamin Herzig on February 03, 2023, 00:34:25Because the need for battery life trumps the need for nicer screens.
This is contrary to all the statistics I know about laptop sales in the world. Most of them are most often used 100% of the time from the outlet. Therefore, their owners do not care deeply about the battery life - it is just a UPS for them and nothing more to drag the laptop in sleep or work mode from room to room and occasionally drag it in sleep mode.
Moreover, against the background of modern processors and video chips, the difference in consumption of 4k@120-144Hz and fhd@120-144Hz is ridiculous and practically does not affect battery life.
All this affected before - when the cpu consumption did not exceed 25-35W.
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Therefore, I insist that all modern laptops, without exception, like smartphones (why don't they reduce the resolution then - if this will lead to greater autonomy? You contradict your own experience in the statements) must have a 4k@120-144Hz screen as perfectly versatile for both work and play/multimedia. And as the highest quality for human vision. No pixelisation.
There is apparently no pixelation at any distance from the screen, resulting in no eye accommodation problems due to spontaneous switching from picture elements to the pixel structure of the screen. The eye muscles tense up 10 times less and rest all the time, just like on smartphones from 25-35cm. I personally see a difference between 300 ppi and 440 ppi from 20-25cm.
All those who continue to put shameful fhd and 2.5k (and they are not able to clearly show either 4k content, let alone fhd content) spoil people's eyesight.
Completing the picture is the disgusting policy of Google (which I have been writing about on all forums for many years) with the intentional inclusion of the wrong mode of black and white (grayscale) font smoothing from version 50 of Chrome (you can easily verify this by comparing this anti-aliasing in FF52-68 c some editing in the settings) or in XP. They didn't give a damn about eye problems in people working on monitors and laptops with low ppi (<220), i.e. the main target platform (and monetization platform) for Google is smartphones, and there are no models left with ppi below 250, and most often above 300. Therefore, the crooked buggy anti-aliasing with shadows around the letters is simply invisible there. And at 141ppi (15.6" fhd), and even more so on a 2.5k 23-31" monitor, it looks HORRIBLE for eyes in Google Chrome.
It is worth putting FF68 and switching the anti-aliasing mode to the correct one, as it was in XP, and you will see what is out of your eyes, as if a film was removed from your eyes compared to the new versions of FF, Chrome, Edge and their clones.
FF at least allows you to disable anti-aliasing altogether with one flag, but Chrome does NOT have such a setting. Like Edge. On the most common browser on the planet - Chrome, fonts are ALWAYS cloudy on the x86 platform if ppi is below 220.
We need to stop spoiling people's eyesight with cloudy fonts in Chrome and put only 4k panels in laptops everywhere!
And also to ban AMOLED screens with a low flicker frequency LEGALLY, because. there have long been scientific papers (which are deliberately hidden and not published widely) that this flicker is especially harmful to children.