AOD - Clock vs Numeric Clock - General Questions and Answers

Hi guys, I'm one of the biggest fans of AOD in Samsung devices. I used to use the Numeric clock, but after a while I decided to switch to the Wall Clock, because of how it's beautiful and I accustomed to it from my childhood, though the Numeric Clock is way more practical.
Anyway, I just want to ask, if the Wall Clock does consume way more battery than the Numeric Clock, because the Seconds' Hand is moving every second like if it was running a video. While the Numeric one is just changing the number every one minute, and even it have some delay, when you compare it to another device , you will notice the clock delay in the Numeric one, so it saves way more battery because it doesn't refresh every second like the Wall Clock.
TLDR My question is, does the Wall Clock consume way more batter than Numeric Clock, or they are almostly similar?

Analog is so much better... the brain isn't digital.
Power consumption after control circuit is dictated by the number of pixels lite.
Nominal power consumption with auto brightness on should be:
Always on* >1%@hr
Tap on* >.5%@hr
If higher it's because of background apps running that shouldn't be.
This is with phone, texting and internet enabled.
Stats are from my Note 10+ running on Pie.
Analog clock, thin profile with dots and a second hand.
Google backup Transport, Framework, Firebase and Google play Services disabled.
Although I suspect the power consumption is the same regardless of color, I haven't tested that.
Green is where human vision sensitivity peaks so it appears brightest at the same lumen intensity. The human eye is least sensitive to red.
Blue pixels age the fastest, red the slowest if display longevity is a concern.
*at night in a dark room

All over the world, children learn to read the time on analog clocks.

Related

[APP] Better Battery Disc HD

Hello. I want to present you a new android app.
HD battery widget allows you to monitor in detail the battery of your smartphone, and set the program of the wireless interfaces to save power.
Battery widget:
- different styles of widget.
- two sizes of the widget 2x2 and 4x3.
- shows the charge, voltage and battery temperature.
- indicates by color of achieving a given level of charge.
- shows forecast of time remaining before the battery runs out.
- shows level and status of battery in the status bar.
Power saving functionality:
- allows you to set the time program when your phone will turn off wi-fi, bluetooth and turn on airplane mode.
- you can set two levels of battery and decide what to do when the phone will be achieving each of them.
Scalable Charts:
- battery level.
- battery temperature.
- battery voltage.
- CPU usage.
Battery usage statistics.
Screens:
More screens
More screens:
Hmmmm looks good... Where do we get it?
Or am I missing something again... Doh!
does it have per percentage wise decrease vs time data?
elegantgabe said:
Nice design
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks, The do you want 1?
I can make 1 for you if you like

How Does Amoled Screen Burn In Work?

I asked the same question on r/oneplus.
So I've bought a OP 7 Pro just 1 month ago and I'm really paranoid about burn in.
I searched a lot about amoled technology and from what i read i assumed screen burn in it's not something recoverable. And I took all the security measures to not make it happen. Auto-brightness, screen timeout to 30s, AOD turned off, and i never leave a static image on my phone.
Today I noticed that when i plugged my phone and the colors screensaver started, the fingerprint icon left a visible mark like it was burned in. But it lasted only a couple seconds and then it disappeared. Same thing happens with the signal icon on the status bar.
So, is that screen burn in? Or it's just image retention? And why is it recovering? Should I worry about it becoming permanent? I'm not even enjoying the phone anymore :c
Sorry for my english and thank you
Not that big of a deal. Especially with screen technology these days. Walk into your local carrier store, or Best Buy, look at an old phone that has an amoled screen and that's left on all the time for display. That's burn in. When the image stays there after a long period of time and doesn't disappear when the screen is turned off and on. When I had my S8 and S9, it was noticeable that the clock and always-on home button shifted all of the time. With screen technology the way it is now, a lot of OEM skins have some sort of burn-in protection in place. I've left the screen on my 7 Pro on for hours on end, alas at the lowest brightness, with the screen timeout set to never and I've never had an issue.
I'm paranoid about burn-in too. I use navigation gestures and systemui tuner app to hide status bar. I use battery widget reborn to see battery percentage and other notifications can be seen in notifications pull down shade. Use auto brightness to change brightness more frequently. I use amoled antiburn app to check for any burn-in. All clear so far.
Since launch, Not much chatter concerning this as an issue... Enjoy your device
I have Google maps burned in..? I hate it because you can see see on a white background alot.

[Feature request] Visual adjustments for Settings UI after 1.34.7 update

My app just updated with some pretty significant changes for how the app's settings are laid out.
Overall I like it, but I have some suggestions that would improve my personal experience, and hopefully some other users feel the same way.
The pane for Playback Speed is huge, and the original one was small and unobtrusive. I use this feature a lot, so this is the biggest issue for me after these updates. I like the +/- buttons, the bar for adjusting speed, and the bigger number, but it takes up half the screen and I can't see the video behind it. If the speed multiplier was placed above the slider bar it could still be pretty big and would free up 2/3 of the space it's currently taking up.
The background appears completely black on my phone. Reviewing the screenshots, there seems to be some level of translucency, but I would like to be able to adjust how translucent it is, down to 50% opacity or less. It's extremely useful to be able to still see the whole video while I'm adjusting settings.
The gradient on the left side of the settings UI goes out pretty far. To close the settings pane I usually tap the video, and with this big gradient it's hard to tell where I can tap to dismiss it.
My phone has a thick case, and some settings UI elements go really close to the edge. Some extra padding or margins on elements near the bottom would be appreciated. ("More" checkbox on Information is hard for me to hit)
The shortcut buttons go all the way to the left edge. A bit more space on the left would be nicer to interact with, and would match up better with the amount of space between the shortcut buttons.
The UI elements at the bottom are pretty close to the corners and the bottom of the screen as well. I think these would benefit from some extra space too.
Hopefully some of these can be considered, especially those first three.
[Edit: The video I'm watching doesn't seem to perfectly match my aspect ratio (I've got it set to Fit To Frame) and those last 2 points aren't as much of an issue when the entire frame is filled. There is still a big gap between the playback bar and the buttons that I find peculiar though.]
[Edit: Actually, scratch those last 2 entirely. The big gap between the playback buttons and bar is helpful to avoid accidental navigation in the video.]

Screen burn-in?

Just curious. How many of you are seeing screen-burn in on your phones?
I use CF.Lumen to adjust the screen to be warmer at night. I notice some darker areas/burn-in with CF.Lumen enabled and the screen brightness dimmed to super low levels (using CF.Lumen's built-in darkness slider for Sleep mode)
What I notice is a sort of dark spot at very low brightness, and a sort of dark shadowy line running down the screen close to the left side. It's kinda annoying but I really only see it when I have text on the screen (and I'm trying to read text) at lower-than-stock dimness levels. I'm slowly getting used to it. At first I panicked thinking that my screen had burned in already at a few months of use, but when I have CF.Lumen off and I have the stock brightness slider set all the way to 0, I don't notice any lines or weird dark spots.
Then again, 0 brightness using the stock brightness slider is still VERY bright if you're coming from iOS's Accessibility settings. Android has poor screen filter settings and few good screen filter apps outside CF.Lumen and f.lux and I doubt Android 12 will change that.
So, are any of you experiencing screen burn-in? OLED burn-in is something that always has me worried. I try to avoid OLED phones for this reason, because I'm paranoid.
OLEDs have a finite lifespan. The brighter they burn, the shorter they last.
The higher energy blue emitters have the shortest life span, while red the longest.
Darker screen wallpaper, dark mode and less white icons/headers helps reduce wear.
Use manual brightness control and avoid going over 50% whenever possible. Don't use in direct sunlight... this is a killer.
Move icons and widgets periodically on the homescreen. Avoid prolonged white screen viewing and apps that are dark mode illiterate.
These practices also increase battery life substantially.
Use Screen Test to see if any damage is present.
After over 1.5 years of heavy usage and one battery replacement, my AMOLED display on my Note 10+ shows no signs of damage. How you use it day to day/what you view with it makes a big difference in display longevity.

Dissable battery percentage on AOD, burn in fear?

So, I like standard aod, all time on. Clock moves, but battery percentage is always on same spot and it is white...
Is there way to remove it from aod and is there danger to destroy screen with it at all?
Thanks.
And one more question - is there some mod to change white balance and rgb strength in natural display mode?
Thanks
Don't think that's actually possible.
And is fixed battery percentage danger for screen?
I wouldn't worry about it.

Categories

Resources