Colors are sharp and vibrant, viewing angles are plenty wide, and the whole thing can get very
bright at max setting.
It has much better contrast, is more evenly lit, screen is
brighter at max setting with a whiter backround.
Not exact matches
This isn't the
brightest headlamp on our list
at a
max output of 70 Lumens, so if you want a blinding sun strapped to your head, you may prefer a different headlamp!
I found the screen to be
brighter than the Kindle Fire with both
at max brightness.
In Standard IPS mode, the Transformer Prime
maxes out
at an extremely
bright 380 nits, but when you enable Super IPS + mode, that number jumps to an eye - burning 600 nits.
That screen is also
brighter and more colorful, with an sRGB rating of 104.2 percent (its smaller siblings top out
at 79.4 percent) and a brightness
max of 405 nits (the other Fire tablets only go up to 380 nits).
The solar cell
maxes out
at approximately 5v @ 100mA in
bright sunlight.
The newer bulbs shine
at 800 lumens
at their
max, whereas the old bulbs can only get up to 600 lumens
at their
brightest.
Like Ionic, Fitbit's new smartwatch features a
bright display capable of
maxing out
at 1,000 nits of brightness.
That screen is also
brighter and more colorful, with an sRGB rating of 104.2 percent (its smaller siblings top out
at 79.4 percent) and a brightness
max of 405 nits (the other Fire tablets only go up to 380 nits).
We also found that the screen couldn't get as
bright as other budget gaming laptops we tested,
maxing out
at 240 nits compared to the Predator 15's above - average maximum of 307 nits.
Colors are vibrant and blacks are deep, and it's
bright enough
at the
max setting to cut through glare.
Even though it's just 1080p, it's pretty sharp and very
bright at 600 nits
max.
They can get pretty
bright;
At max brightness, the 60 - watt equivalent Sol was more than able to flood my bedroom with light.
In battery mode, the lights dim down a bit to help conserve power, putting out closer to 500 lumens
at max brightness — just slightly
brighter than what you'd expect from an average 40 - watt bulb.
Also, more on the RE /
MAX case, a look back
at Dale Rector's
bright idea, and a new VP for Move.com.
When Elizabeth Mendenhall arrived
at work on a
bright September morning, a line of SUVs, sedans, and minivans was already snaking around the parking lot
at RE /
MAX Boone County Real Estate in Columbia, Mo..