#713 Me gustaría poder hacer esa comparación, pero no tengo a mano ningún Nexus One. Sin embargo he leído muchos comentarios de los que sí lo tienen y se quejan de que sobre todo el texto en pantalla se ve algo borroso, y por ejemplo en este artículo sobre el mismo tema puedes leer varios ejemplos:
That explains why the Nexus screen seemed visibly “dotty” in a way I’ve never seen an LCD look.
I wouldn’t say this is hardly noticeable; this has bothered me since the day I received mine. Photos look fine, but text and vector graphics have a horrid red sawtooth pattern on one side, and a green fringe on the other. It looks like botched subpixel antiailising. I’m debating returning my N1 and getting a Droid (or just waiting to see what comes next) as a result of this. I could learn to live with this, but it’s hardly desirable.
Come to think, this may have worked better had the red-blue ordering not changed every other row. I didn’t notice the green fringe on the right side of light areas until I went looking for it, but I noticed the red-blue-red-blue sawtooth artifact on the left within a few minutes of using the display. Had there just been a red or blue fringe on the left, I might not have noticed.
I have a Droid. When I received my Nexus One, I immediately notice that the text display on the screen is terrible compare to the Droid. Don’t understand why Google ship such lame OLED on us?
Y no sólo eso sino que ésta ordenación de pixels de PenTile también parece tener efectos indeseables en la representación de los colores, lo cual me parece bastante lógico ya que cada pixel necesita "apoyarse" o como lo quieras llamar en los pixels adyacentes. Cito de aquí:
The PenTile Matrix OLED display used in the Nexus One uses 16-bit color. Most high-end smartphone displays make use of 18-bit color plus dithering to emulate 24-bit. The red and blue on the Nexus One have only have 32 possible intensity levels; the green has 64. Because screen colors are the result of mixing the red, green, blue the colors on the Nexus One are coarse, inaccurate, exhibit noticeable false contouring, and have a green & magenta tints in images.
Yo sinceramente espero que no usen la misma tecnología en el iPhone 4G.