[Q] Galaxy Note Edge Screen Brightness - Note Edge Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

I've recently purchased a Note Edge. Pretty happy with it, although there's one software "feature" that really bothers me. The Note Edge and the Note 4 are identical in specs, but the Note 4 is brighter when they're both on max brightness... Why? When the Note Note Edge is on max brightness, it is a good deal darker than the Note 4 on max brightness. When you put the Edge on max brightness, it is still being limited. The Note Edge will only go to the "true" max brightness when it is on auto, and there is a very bright light shinning on the light sensor(such as the sun or a flashlight). The Note 4, however, doesn't have this feature and go's to "true" max brightness even on manual. Is it possible to change/void this setting so that max brightness can be achieved even on manual and without having a bright light source shinning on the sensor?

I read somewhere if you leave it on auto. Then outside in the sunlight it will go past the max brightness so you can see. Perhaps thats the difference between the note 4 and the Edge brightness setting.

larollin said:
I read somewhere if you leave it on auto. Then outside in the sunlight it will go past the max brightness so you can see. Perhaps thats the difference between the note 4 and the Edge brightness setting.
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Click to collapse
This is in the wrong section... (Should be in Q&A) but anyway...
I have a Note 4 & Note Edge, and the brightness "issue" the op mentions is completely true... (I noticed that the 1st day, and was disappointed with the Edge too) However... here is the good news...
-> If I go outside in the sunlight with both devices at the same time... The Note Edge becomes equal or even a bit brighter than the Note 4... So... at least for me, The "issue" is no longer an issue... I have done this various times with same results... hope this helps the OP feel better...

Oops. Sorry I didn't realize it should be in the question and answer section. I just started using xda. And do you think there will be a module that can change this?
Sent from my SM-N915T

Idk why you need the screen so bright anyways.
I can see mines clearly in the day time and at night.
I am willing to bet that the MAX brightness you said. Isnt on there due to the smaller battery.
I know another member on the board has said something about using Lux apk, but i dont dont remember what was said.

I've just realised that in bright sunlight when I leave the brightness in auto mode the screen is much brighter than if I would use the maximum manual setting. I'm very happy with it ,this is an amazing device !
Cheers

white note edge
Does any one have a livht leak around the screen at the top and bottom and sides like its glowing

embieone said:
Does any one have a livht leak around the screen at the top and bottom and sides like its glowing
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Can you post a screenshot? Haven't got it as far as I can tell
p.s. quote if you reply, otherwise I won't notice

note edge
I carnt its around the side of the phone inbetween the screen and metal and at the bottom of the screen

Guys the samsung NoteEdge on lollipop has that issue. Basically you can't switch auto brightness fully off it will control your brightness even if uncheck the box. After weeks of searching and trying I found a kind of solution because I love to see my screen in all his power and brightness. Solution is call "screen filter" can be found in the play store for free. Set the brightness at 100% and switch it on. You'll see the difference.

embieone said:
I carnt its around the side of the phone inbetween the screen and metal and at the bottom of the screen
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Click to collapse
I have the same issue.

Hey all,
Just found this thread and discovered something interesting.
Holding a magnet to the bottom left of the screen increases the screen brightness to 100% as per the note 4's brightness.
I have both handsets and considering a genuine Sammy flip case for the note, and also want to insert a generic wireless charging strip between the handset and the back case.
I wanted to see if it's a simple magnet in the Sammy flip cover which deactivates the main screen and activates the edge display. It's not, a magnet to the front just restores the screen brightness to that of the note four.
I can confirm that the magnet does not change the brightness when in automatic mode. I can also confirm that when in manual mode the brightness does not fly up to 100%, but rather just nudges it up very slightly to that of the equivalent brightness level set on the note 4.
The magnet in the Sammy flip cover means that the edge display is always at it's brightest when the cover is closed because battery drain on that tiny strip is negligable.
So, it's pretty clear now that this is a Sammy software adjustment to counter a smaller battery compounded by a wider screen.
I'd have preferred if we had a software switch to turn this damned thing off, but I'm guessing a decreased battery life wouldn't bode well consumers expecting more for their extra cash for the edge, and I suppose the only real world difference on auto would be if both handsets were tested in bright lighting conditions. Sneaky Sammy.
The note edge flip cover has a few mm of padding on the back of the handset I'm going to see if I can source a strong but thin neodineum magnet that will keep brightness at note 4 levels and slide it into the cover or inside it above the battery.
There also seems a strong magnetic source on the bottom right side of the screen, I presume it's to activate a magnetic switch in the flip cover which accounts for the terminals on the flip cover connector.
Once I have a flip case and the generic wireless charging receiver strip delivered I'll see if I can combine the two with the magnet as well.
The extra battery drain can't be that bad? Surely it's just a matter of percentage battery size decrease.
Anyway, someone clever should be able to find a software alteration to achieve the same now we know where to look, but alas that's not me!

Related

Galaxy S IV - Screen, display, auto brightness, etc explained

As it seems there are a few threads on auto brightness and color issues, i figure i should do the best i can to explain how it works on the S4, and mobiles in general. I work in Television/Film and have been shooting for almost a decade.
ANY QUESTIONS, feel free to PM me, i'll probably ask for very specific photo's (ISO/WB and other data) so i can help you in a professional manner, and i'll try to reply within 6-8 hours. No one should live with a bum screen!
To fully understand what im trying to express, load the attached image onto your phone, and on a bright sunny afternoon, print out the attached image on a small piece of decent photo paper, grab your phone, and find a room in your house that has only fluorescent lights and close any windows or shutters.
Look at the photo in the sunlight; note the colors. Now go inside to the fluorescent dark room, note the change in what the colors look like, and that white is still pretty white (thats your brain), then turn your camera flashlight on (LED), and note the changes in color again (some reds may look purplish or greens bluish), but white still looks kinda white (should look very light blue). Now repeat and look at the print out versus the same image on your phone screen; it should match best under 6500k lighting, but still be off (thats a printed image vs monitor thing though). Also depends on your printer ink type (dye/pigment), color space, etc etc etc. Your eyes take raw data in, but your brain does the magic, and says 'nope, thats white', so you perceive it as 'white' or 'white enough' and you 'know' it is meant to 'represent' white.
Hardware - This includes an ambient light sensor. The way these work is similar to metering systems in cameras; they measure the amount of light hitting a photodiode. Even in high end (DSLR) cameras, sometimes the light meters are junk. On cell phones, they are typically pretty crappy. The iPhone 5's have excellent ALS (ambient light sensors) and they ramp up/down smoothly; much better than any other device i've used.
The way the ALS works in most devices is simple; there are several photodiodes, each tuned for a specific spectrum of light. Say two for 3200k, two for 6500k, two for whatever else, etc, and they basically average the reading, apply a curve, and adjust the screen appropriately. They do NOT accurately measure color temperature very well, and 'see' brightness only in limited spectrums, meaning their idea of what 'bright' and 'dim' is may be vastly different from the human eyes' perceived 'bright' or 'dim'. Also, the 'curves' applied don't match up that well with how the human eye perceives brightness; its really amazing we can fake it as close as we can, really, but most of the magic lies in your brain.
Lighting - this is kind of tricky; and i don't feel like getting into it too deeply, but what you perceive as 'white' is mostly dependent on your brain; not your eyes or the lights around you. Think about reading a book (a real book) inside a library under fluorescent lights; the pages are white, even though the color temperature might be 5000k or 6500k. Now that same book outside; thats 5800k. Now under some old incandescent lights; that might be 2800k. Yet you know it SHOULD be white. Thats your brain. And thats reflected light; its based on the ambient color temperature around you; so reflected light 'looks' white or blue or whatever.
Your phone screen (galaxy S IV) is basically white balanced at 6600k , so it will appear most white when around lighting around 6500k, which is on the bluer side of daylight/cloudy and indoors.
Screen Mode - The Galaxy S IV has a feature that allows it to dynamically change based on the ALS, or can be overridden by the user, which mostly affects color gamut, and either amps up contrast and saturation while shifting hues slightly, or flattens them to a more realistic (usually most people prefer high saturation/high contrast images) image.
Sampling frequency - i have no idea what the ALS sensor samples at, or any definitive specs on the exact sensor and how it interacts with auto brightness, its priority, etc (yet, ive emailed Samsung and i wouldn't mind coming up with a simple app to adjust this if i can figure out the sensor specs and their software). But certain lights (fluorescent mostly) flicker at either 50hz or 60hz depending on their AC current, which may, at times, interfere or give bad readings to the ALS depending on the ALS sensor reading timings (again i do not know exactly what those values are, i suspect they are long as my S III and S IV typically react about a half-second behind lighting changes).
DETERMINING IF YOU HAVE A BAD DISPLAY
All together, it works pretty darn good, if a bit slowly, but there seems to be a lot of confusion and people wondering if their screen is bad. The BEST and EASIEST way is to go to any cell store or mall, and compare YOUR screen and the SAME image to another S IV, with the same settings. The best settings for this are to turn power saving OFF, turn off ALL power saving apps, turn auto brightness OFF, turn brightness up ALL THE WAY, go to 'settings', 'display', 'screen mode', and change the setting to 'movie'. Compare several IDENTICAL images or pages. Then change the 'screen mode' to 'standard' and compare the same images.
While doing so, be sure to check out images such as the one i provided and make sure the colors match, grays are grays or at least the same slight caste of pink/green/etc, and while doing so, TILT THE SCREENS at various angles together (level surface, side by side, tilt to 45 degrees at the same time on all 4 axes), and look for discoloration or bleeding; if you see big differences between two or three other phones and yours, you got a bum screen. I haven't seen a 'bad' one yet, and i made the poor AT&T guy open up five of them and let me play with them (AMOLED also has jet black splotches with full blacks in a fully black room; i wanted the screen with the least noticeable splotches).
Thanks for this. Question though. When I pull my keyboard up to type on something or if I'm in a YouTube video and I tap the screen to bring up the progress bar the color shifts dramatically. I've tried many settings and it always does this. Also tried it on another s4 multiple ones did the same thing...
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using Tapatalk 2
Just hoping for a fix for it
The white balance can actually be calibrated by changing the calibration levels of the LEDs sitting under the screen
Lets hope for the best
jetlitheone said:
Thanks for this. Question though. When I pull my keyboard up to type on something or if I'm in a YouTube video and I tap the screen to bring up the progress bar the color shifts dramatically. I've tried many settings and it always does this. Also tried it on another s4 multiple ones did the same thing...
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using Tapatalk 2
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ok, do me a favor, I would prefer if you had either a prosumer camera you could use, or better yet a DSLR you could borrow that i could guide you through how to take two shots of the differences with all the important variables locked down so i can figure it out for you. I believe the screenshot feature ignores the 'Screen Mode' settings, as it should (you wouldnt want a screen mode dictating recording colorimetry options), so it does require real photos to figure out.
Have you changed the standard 'Screen Mode' setting or left it at 'Adapt Display' or 'Dynamic'? Those will keep changing it; Professional photo and movie are more flat, but they do not change. Again disable power saving mode, power saving apps, turn off auto brightness, (in this case set brightness to where you want it) and check it out again; if it doesnt change colors, (which it should not), you have no issues; its a normal 'feature' of the device. The idea is to limit all variables. Try that and PM me the results. If the colors no longer shift, the issue was 'adapt display' or 'dynamic' Screen Modes. Auto brightness/powersaving mode/power saving apps should only affect brightness; we are only disabling them to limit perceived changes.
To try to trouble shoot this, change screen mode to a static setting like 'professional photo' or 'movie' in Screen Mode and turn off auto brightness, turn off power saving and turn off all power/battery saving apps/etc, bring up a Youtube video and play it, then bring up your keyboard and see if the color shifts (it shouldnt if you have changed Screen Mode to Pro Photo/Movie and disabled powersave/all battery apps/auto brightness). Then let me know if that fixes it via PM.
rapaholic999 said:
Just hoping for a fix for it
The white balance can actually be calibrated by changing the calibration levels of the LEDs sitting under the screen
Lets hope for the best
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
problem is most calibration settings/programs and methods i know of are non-pentile and are mostly software fixes for what ive used; AMOLED is different PenTile (RGBG) than what i tried to fix before which was Motorola Atrix 4G PenTile (RGBW, red green blue white), CCFL LCD is way different (more what im used to, as well as LED LCD and even IPS is easier as it is still RGB), and all the curves software etc are all proprietary to manufacturers. Granted controlling just the R/G/B/G LED's would help, but getting the curve right and correcting might take longer than the Galaxy S V arrival. I spent months calibrating all my gear; most of it is 2-3 years old, and at least 6-12 months old before i get it all settled and can rely on it for a given job. Usually i rely on calibrated displays, knowing my own color limitations, RGB histograms, vector scopes, etc (i have a very slight red/green color weakness, but extremely sharp vision and i know how to work around my limitations).
I actually emailed Samsung about this for as much information as i could get (not much so far but im digging). I have a friend playing with LUT curves on his S IV and he says its a close second to the iPhone screens for AdobeRGB in 'movie' mode, which i happen to agree with; its pretty flat, but the contrast on greens is still high, which again is a PenTile RGBG specific issue; we are both vets of backlit RGB panels. My friend also works with the same company i consult/represent; it took him almost three months to properly calibrate LUT curves between a single sensor and a simple 480P CCFL LCD display, and that was with full manufacturer support. Colorimetry is a science.
jetlitheone said:
When I pull my keyboard up to type on something or if I'm in a YouTube video and I tap the screen to bring up the progress bar the color shifts dramatically. I've tried many settings and it always does this.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Same here. Thanks for the write up but I'm seeing the same thing.
I dim the display with the Screen Filter app for reading in bed and whenever my keyboard pops up (SwiftKey, TouchPal or stock) the entire screen gets a green cast. Under these conditions it is very dramatic.
I use manual brightness and turned off the Autoadjust Screen Tone setting
Some other apps exhibit a fluctuation in color cast when I put my finger near the screen which is double weird. :-\
-darren
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using Tapatalk 2
Yes it's weird I don't know what's happening. Anyways I'd toy turn the brightness up past half way the color cast goes away. .. Not sure what it is
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If you go to a settings menu and scroll up and down fast, my phone gets a purple tint and leaves like a shadow of the words behind... Kinda annoying.. Anyone else notice this?
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using Tapatalk 2
Yes smearing
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using Tapatalk 2
MrPlNK said:
If you go to a settings menu and scroll up and down fast, my phone gets a purple tint and leaves like a shadow of the words behind... Kinda annoying.. Anyone else notice this?
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using Tapatalk 2
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
thats because AMOLED usually have a slower response time, upwards of 20ms
jetlitheone said:
Yes smearing
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using Tapatalk 2
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Click to collapse
yep, i have some old LG CCFL LCD monitors with a claimed 2ms (more like 6-10ms) response time from 2006; they were about $300 each back then. i also have a new IPS with 30ms response time; it is annoying.
also some pentile displays are slower between subpixels; my Atrix 4G had very slow blue white pixels (RGBW) so you had a weird dimming as well when scrolling through texts.
Settings, Display, disable Auto Adjust Screen Tone' as well, its a power saving thing i forgot to mention in the first write up.
Slade8525 said:
thats because AMOLED usually have a slower response time, upwards of 20ms
yep, i have some old LG CCFL LCD monitors with a claimed 2ms (more like 6-10ms) response time from 2006; they were about $300 each back then. i also have a new IPS with 30ms response time; it is annoying.
also some pentile displays are slower between subpixels; my Atrix 4G had very slow blue white pixels (RGBW) so you had a weird dimming as well when scrolling through texts.
Settings, Display, disable Auto Adjust Screen Tone' as well, its a power saving thing i forgot to mention in the first write up.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
it can be fixed with color adjustment though so maybe a software update can fix it as well
I bought the s4 the first day it came out, after using it for couple of days i started noticing weird stuff on my photos, especially on low light photos... i went to att and one of the rep said its a known issue its called "elephant effect" im into photography and i havent heard that term before, he also said that it will be fix on the next update... so i went home and did some research about "elephant effect" unfortunately i cant can find anything related with my issue... i also did some pixel peeping and im 100% positive there's something off on the display of my phone.
Sample photos
These photos are just screenshots
You can see those weird artifacts on the pictures, i also compared my screen display to my coworker's phone and my phone was way off...
What i would suggest for those who wants to buy the new s4 or currently users, is to check the display by taking a photo on a low light and do some pixel peeping...
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using xda app-developers app
Has anyone else noticed a color and contrast shift from the top to the bottom of the screen? In very low brightness settings my screen gradients from crushed black levels and a reddish hue at the top of the screen to a acceptable black levels and an more green hue at the bottom of the screen. I can try to get some pictures with my DSLR tonight to illustrate. I'll have to compare to other S4's in the same scenario. In every day use its not too noticeable, but while watching video in a completely dark environment with the brightness all the way down it now bothers me some.
Anyone have a similar experience? Thanks!
Yes I notice it. It fixes itself if you change the brightness with an app. so I'm guessing its a weird kernel thing. It only happens when the keyboard is up
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using Tapatalk 2
jetlitheone said:
Yes I notice it. It fixes itself if you change the brightness with an app. so I'm guessing its a weird kernel thing. It only happens when the keyboard is up
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I notice it with or without the keyboard. I use the Display Tester app to display a full screen white or 50% gray and now that I look at it, the red hue at the top of the screen is visible at all but 100% brightness levels. What app were you using to dim the screen, I would like to try it out.
Here is an exaggerated image I made showing the gradation (50% gray). The top of the screen would be to the left. Black levels get crushed at the top of the screen also.
(Sorry for the bad image compression, my screen doesn't have the extreme banding in it!)
WestonWW said:
I notice it with or without the keyboard. I use the Display Tester app to display a full screen white or 50% gray and now that I look at it, the red hue at the top of the screen is visible at all but 100% brightness levels. What app were you using to dim the screen, I would like to try it out.
Here is an exaggerated image I made showing the gradation (50% gray). The top of the screen would be to the left. Black levels get crushed at the top of the screen also.
(Sorry for the bad image compression, my screen doesn't have the extreme banding in it!)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
screen adjuster, lags like hell but you can see it fixes it.
set values +5 for each color.
batanuenio said:
I bought the s4 the first day it came out, after using it for couple of days i started noticing weird stuff on my photos, especially on low light photos... i went to att and one of the rep said its a known issue its called "elephant effect" im into photography and i havent heard that term before, he also said that it will be fix on the next update... so i went home and did some research about "elephant effect" unfortunately i cant can find anything related with my issue... i also did some pixel peeping and im 100% positive there's something off on the display of my phone.
Sample photos
These photos are just screenshots
You can see those weird artifacts on the pictures, i also compared my screen display to my coworker's phone and my phone was way off...
What i would suggest for those who wants to buy the new s4 or currently users, is to check the display by taking a photo on a low light and do some pixel peeping...
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ill check that out; it looks like compression artifacts; what settings are you using when you shoot? also to internal or external SD card? and speed rating/brand/type of external SD card?
jetlitheone said:
screen adjuster, lags like hell but you can see it fixes it.
set values +5 for each color.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I tried that and it made little to no difference on my phone. I went to the AT&T store on my lunch and compared my phone to the display unit. My phone has a noticeable difference. The rep at the AT&T store suggested I take it to the local repair depot... I've never been there before but I hope they don't try to pawn a refurb phone off on me to replace my 17 day old S4. I'll let you guys know what I find out.
Slade8525 said:
ill check that out; it looks like compression artifacts; what settings are you using when you shoot? also to internal or external SD card? and speed rating/brand/type of external SD card?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I was using auto mode on my camera and used the internal mem.
batanuenio said:
I was using auto mode on my camera and used the internal mem.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
did you zoom in, and what size (pixel wise) did you use? thats textbook macroblocking.
Hi my s4 have a yellow tint, i compare with other s4 and my s4 screen have much yellow in white screen, is faulty? Is possibile to fix it with gamma correction?

How many people have experienced screen burn in on their S6 yet?

Hi all, let's get straight to the point. I'm about to buy a new phone, probably the s6, but I'm concerned about one thing: how many of you have experienced screen burn in? I know it's a common thing with amoled displays. I'm not talking about the design flaw because of which you can see a sort of rectangular outline (only visible with full brightness outside and with a white screen) on the display (I'm not entire sure of this, I've read some reports about it though and I don't think it would bother me), but I'm talking about impressed/ghost images like status bar/text/icons/etc. that appear even if you change image on the screen. Hope I was clear enough, english isn't my native tongue. Thanks for the help!
i had an s2 - no burn in, s4 - no burn in, s6 - no burn in so far
so i think unless you keep the screen on for hours every single day on max brightness on the same image, it is very unlikely to get burn in.
Been having Samsung devices since s3 never got one and I got all note and s series
Sent from my SM-G925F
Bought at AT&T, may 6 2015, my Galaxy S6. Not burn in. I have no problems with my phone so far.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G920A using Tapatalk
Ive had the S1, S2, S3, S3 LTE, S4, S5 and now the S6.
I have never had burn in on any of these phones. The S4 I used daily for 2 years and still no burn in.
If you use the device normally and don't leave one thing on the display for hours on a high brightness then burn in is not a problem.
2 month old S6 here, half brightness with auto mode. Mark left by status bar and also dirty screen effect. Looking at a grey screen I see marks that could quite possibly be burn from the keyboard too.
After 3 months, no burnin. However there's a noticeable difference between the status bar and the rest of the screen. The screen has yellowed slightly
iamhacked said:
After 3 months, no burnin. However there's a noticeable difference between the status bar and the rest of the screen. The screen has yellowed slightly
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
LOL this is like you say roof is not leaking but waterdrops are all over the ceiling LOL

Redish screen or edges

Hey. Do u also have problem with sgs8/8+ and their red screen or even pink ??
On the internet i can see that many clients has this problem and samsung says that "this must be like it is"... so ?
Do we have #PinkGate??
My samsung have also redish whole screen.
Nothing ? No one ?
Yeah, i returned mine. Top half of screen was red. Bottom half was green. Any screen mode other than adaptive just made it worse.
Dud u get new one without this crap ? Or u just wanna cash back ??
I've exchanged 4 with my cell provider before getting a perfect one
Was just about to post a similar topic, think I'm going to be taking this one back today, my first one had a red hue down the sides and this one appears to have a pink lower half that I am trying to live with but cannot...
My first one was perfect but it had broken speaker. Then had to try another two to finally get acceptable one. Not perfect, it goes pink-ish on specific angle, but it's not that bad. I really suggest to buy those phones in store so you can check it and save yourself some time.
this problem was addressed and fixed by an update as far as i know...
RockyAJ said:
this problem was addressed and fixed by an update as far as i know...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's a hardware problem, so it can't be fixed by software. All the update did was allow you to mess with the RGB sliders and it's only available in the "Adaptive Display" mode. This option doesn't help if your display has multiple different hues such as a top reddish hue and a bottom greenish hue. It also is in "Adaptive Display" mode which is the least colour accurate mode.
This is a well-documented issue, like anything AMOLED, there can be a lot of variation from panel to panel. You should be able to go to the retailer and swap it out.
kotaro_14 said:
It's a hardware problem, so it can't be fixed by software. All the update did was allow you to mess with the RGB sliders and it's only available in the "Adaptive Display" mode. This option doesn't help if your display has multiple different hues such as a top reddish hue and a bottom greenish hue. It also is in "Adaptive Display" mode which is the least colour accurate mode.
This is a well-documented issue, like anything AMOLED, there can be a lot of variation from panel to panel. You should be able to go to the retailer and swap it out.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So it was just another"marketing stunt" by samsung.mine doesn't have it but reading about it when I first got my s8+,thought it was a software problem.thanks for the clarification
On my third S8+ due to pink hues on the display. My fourth should be delivered on Monday. Fingers crossed that it has a good screen and won't have to be exchanged.
pieces of cake said:
On my third S8+ due to pink hues on the display. My fourth should be delivered on Monday. Fingers crossed that it has a good screen and won't have to be exchanged.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
In my opinion, this is ridiculus - cuz this phone costs really a lot of money and samsung dont give a **** about customers and samsungs problem with screen. Samsung is mocking to telling us that "update" will solve "your" Problem.
Im from Poland and here samsung store says "its a advantage of this PRODUCT"...... crapy telling
My device has a pretty messed up display, to the point where the software controls that Samsung has added are just enough to solve the problem. I have the cool / warm slider all the way to the right (warm), because this cancels out the green tint a bit. From advanced settings I have the green slider at about 20%, the red slider at about 80%, and the blue slider at 100%.
And because this wasn't enough, the display has a warm glow at the edges. Thankfully, Samsung has a software solution for this, and it works by adding a cool tint at the edges to counter-act the warm tint. But this solution isn't perfect, as the warm tint disappears when the display is looked at in an angle, and the blue software-added tint becomes visible.
I haven't returned my device because the problem is fully solvable through software, although I am a bit disappointed that a phone that cost over $900 has problems that the user has to put effort in to solve.
Had to go through 4 phones from my carrier before getting a perfect screen even tilting the phone I have no red and in any display mode no red or pink at all... there should not be a bandaid fix for a 900$ phone... having to adjust settings is gonna hurt resale value also
galaxyYtester said:
My device has a pretty messed up display, to the point where the software controls that Samsung has added are just enough to solve the problem. I have the cool / warm slider all the way to the right (warm), because this cancels out the green tint a bit. From advanced settings I have the green slider at about 20%, the red slider at about 80%, and the blue slider at 100%.
And because this wasn't enough, the display has a warm glow at the edges. Thankfully, Samsung has a software solution for this, and it works by adding a cool tint at the edges to counter-act the warm tint. But this solution isn't perfect, as the warm tint disappears when the display is looked at in an angle, and the blue software-added tint becomes visible.
I haven't returned my device because the problem is fully solvable through software, although I am a bit disappointed that a phone that cost over $900 has problems that the user has to put effort in to solve.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's not "fully" solvable through software. The appearance of the display changes when tilted, just as you said. I'm really hopeful that the replacement I receive via UPS tomorrow has a quality display. Even after playing with the advanced display settings on and off for days, I cannot get rid of the heavy pink tint at the bottom of my current (3rd) phone's display. It's a real shame.
Well, my fourth device arrived today and it's basically as bad as all of the others. This time it has an even pink tint along every edge of the display. This is getting old. I really hope that this issue doesn't carry over to the Note 8.
I went through 4 Nexus 6Ps to find one that had an even screen tone. This is a problem faced by all AMOLED screen. My S8+ isnt the best but it's not that bad either.
Sent from my SM-G955F using Tapatalk
B3501 said:
I went through 4 Nexus 6Ps to find one that had an even screen tone. This is a problem faced by all AMOLED screen. My S8+ isnt the best but it's not that bad either.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've had the Galaxy SIII, two S4's, S5, Note 4, two Note Edges, two Note 5's, S7, two S7 Edge's, three Note 7's, three Gear Fit2's, two Gear S3's and four S8+'s. All AMOLED displays.
The ONLY one with which I've had problems is the S8+. This is NOT a problem with ALL AMOLED displays. This is clearly a manufacturing defect with the S8, as can be evidenced by Samsung's OTA that adds "corrective" features to the advanced display settings. Please don't try to make excuses for them.
pieces of cake said:
I've had the Galaxy SIII, two S4's, S5, Note 4, two Note Edges, two Note 5's, three Note 7's, three Gear Fit2's, two Gear S3's and four S8+'s. All AMOLED displays.
The ONLY one with which I've had problems is the S8+. This is NOT a problem with ALL AMOLED displays. This is clearly a manufacturing defect with the S8, as can be evidenced by Samsung's OTA that adds "corrective" features to the advanced display settings. Please don't try to make excuses for them.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I agree it's bad and shouldn't be happening and my S8 screen isn't entirely uniform but as I said, the 6Ps I had and Nexus 6 was terrible for it too.
Sent from my SM-G955F using Tapatalk
Mine had a slight pinkish tint to the bottom of it, but i dialed *#15987# on the phone and then pressed 3 to set it to -9 overall... this appears to do the trick for me.

[Q] Note 10/10+ Dynamic Screen

Cant seem to find anything concrete info about the display. Not sure if any of you got the s/note series prior to the note 10, but the screen on the note 10 is different. I noticed the screen color (especially on white backgrounds) shifts quite strong. What i mean by that is noticeable to the point i can see when it shifts color, unlike how iphone does it gradually on their screens. I thought the dynamic screen just means less bluelight?
so my questions are
is it just me who notice this?
is this part of the tech? if not then i have a faulty panel?
I have the note 10.
LitoNi said:
Cant seem to find anything concrete info about the display. Not sure if any of you got the s/note series prior to the note 10, but the screen on the note 10 is different. I noticed the screen color (especially on white backgrounds) shifts quite strong. What i mean by that is noticeable to the point i can see when it shifts color, unlike how iphone does it gradually on their screens. I thought the dynamic screen just means less bluelight?
so my questions are
is it just me who notice this?
is this part of the tech? if not then i have a faulty panel?
I have the note 10.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I usually notice stuff, but with Note10 I didn't or it didn't bother me at all. Color shift meaning when you tilt the phone or under different lighting?
99% of people says I'm just whining over nothing but I'm extremely sensitive to this color shift when I tilt the device a little bit. I love samsung amoled screens but I hate this color shift phenomena and it's usually a lottery. My first S10+ was awful but I had to do a warranty claim for other reasons and second S10+ has an almost perfect screen (only very minimal shift to blue).
I ordered 3 note 10+ to avoid this (and planning on selling 2 for profit) but all three had way worse screen than my S10+ in terms of color shifting, they turn extremely red/pink if I tilt them a little bit during normal use, they also have washed out, non uniform. gray (OneUI night mode) while on the S10+ it looks almost completely black and uniform, oh well.
Charkatak said:
I usually notice stuff, but with Note10 I didn't or it didn't bother me at all. Color shift meaning when you tilt the phone or under different lighting?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I mean does the dynamic amoled screen shift colors or white balance like how it does on iPhones with their true tone display.
Cause I often find my self seeing the white balance shifting to red or green when I move to different lighting areas.
I assume its the brightness changing that may have resulted changing the white balance. Maybe my eyes are playing tricks on me. I sometimes see text closer to red than what or yellow (with blue light filter on)
vwite said:
99% of people says I'm just whining over nothing but I'm extremely sensitive to this color shift when I tilt the device a little bit. I love samsung amoled screens but I hate this color shift phenomena and it's usually a lottery. My first S10+ was awful but I had to do a warranty claim for other reasons and second S10+ has an almost perfect screen (only very minimal shift to blue).
I ordered 3 note 10+ to avoid this (and planning on selling 2 for profit) but all three had way worse screen than my S10+ in terms of color shifting, they turn extremely red/pink if I tilt them a little bit during normal use, they also have washed out, non uniform. gray (OneUI night mode) while on the S10+ it looks almost completely black and uniform, oh well.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yea I was wondering is it a defect. Read above I don't think it's a feature. Again could be my eyes playing tricks on me. Funny how I didn't notice this on previous galaxy phones. Including the s10.
If it's only happening on the dynamic mode(I'm thinking your saying auto mode), why use it all. Dynamic/ auto means just that, it will and is going to shift depending on ambient light. Manually set it, and forget it.
But if you have set it manually(or even the auto) I would say it's more a situation that 'your eyes' made need something special(I don't know how iPhone shifts differ, as I haven't worked on one in a few years), and, it's not a fault of the device, as most people don't have this level of sensitivity or seeing.
Sent from my Note 10+ using Tapatalk

Proximity sensor not working with always on display

Hi
I've been trawling through the forums for a couple days now to see if anyone has come up with a solution to, or a reason why Samsung doesn't leave the proximity sensor on while the always on display is active anymore (since the Note S10).
I know the sensor has been moved behind the screen. But it seems to function in the same way it used to. It still blanks the screen during a call, if I hold something over it up to about 20mm away. Just not with the always on display.
I'm currently using aodNotify as a sort of workaround. But would much prefer if the always on display just worked like every other damn phone!
Does anyone know the reason why Samsung has disabled this? Uses too much power? I Don't know.
rancid990 said:
Hi
I've been trawling through the forums for a couple days now to see if anyone has come up with a solution to, or a reason why Samsung doesn't leave the proximity sensor on while the always on display is active anymore (since the Note S10).
I know the sensor has been moved behind the screen. But it seems to function in the same way it used to. It still blanks the screen during a call, if I hold something over it up to about 20mm away. Just not with the always on display.
I'm currently using aodNotify as a sort of workaround. But would much prefer if the always on display just worked like every other damn phone!
Does anyone know the reason why Samsung has disabled this? Uses too much power? I Don't know.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Working in what way ? Mine works as in, it gets brighter or dimmer according to the light around me.....or are you wanting/expecting AOD to turn off when the screen is covered ?
seczdbz said:
Working in what way ? Mine works as in, it gets brighter or dimmer according to the light around me.....or are you wanting/expecting AOD to turn off when the screen is covered ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Exactly, the former of what you said is all it* does when AOD is active.
In any case this is now normal operation possibly done to help save battery.
*I'm not sure that the proximity sensor is the ambient light detector?
I think what the OP is saying is that for example if you cover the screen whilst the AOD is on, it used to turn the AOD off before. It no longer does this.
Behavior started with the S10 series.
Limeybastard said:
I think what the OP is saying is that for example if you cover the screen whilst the AOD is on, it used to turn the AOD off before. It no longer does this.
Behavior started with the S10 series.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So if you had it in your pocket it use less battery?
Interesting.
On most other phones, and Samsung's prior to the Note 10. If you put the phone face down, or placed it in your pocket, the always on display would turn off to save battery. They no longer do this.
I wonder if there's a work around for this somehow.
blackhawk said:
So if you had it in your pocket it use less battery?
Interesting.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yep, or if you're posh and use a leather folio case .
(sticks pinky finger out while opening phone)
Limeybastard said:
Yep, or if you're posh and use a leather folio case .
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Lmao
More heavy metal, you know... with the finger eating indestructible case

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