Now as for the availability of tablet devices laced with
the new PenTile display, Samsung has said it will be around the later half of this year.
Not exact matches
We'll cover the
new iPad in - depth like our other Tablet Shoot - Outs below and discuss often misunderstood topics like IGZO, IPS,
PenTile, screen reflectance, color gamut, viewing angles, display power, LCD versus OLED, light and power efficiency, and what's coming next in mobile displays.
For additional background and information see the iPad Retina Display Technology Shoot - Out article that compares and analyzes the
new iPad, the iPad 2, and iPhone 4, and the Samsung Galaxy S OLED Display Technology Shoot - Out that compares and analyzes the evolution of the OLED displays on the Galaxy S I, II, and III and compares and analyzes
PenTile displays compared to standard RGB displays.
Samsung is claiming an excellent WQXGA 2560 x 1600 resolution for the
new 10.1 - inch, 300dpi
PenTile prototype display.
The company refers to this
new technology as Z - Type arrangement and it includes 3 sub-pixels (RGB) per pixel (unlike Samsung's
Pentile displays).
Some people really dislike
Pentile displays, but Samsung keep producing AMOLED with PenTile - even in their flagship devices such as the new Galaxy S3 (which sports a 4.8» 1280x720 HD Super A
Pentile displays, but Samsung keep producing AMOLED with
PenTile - even in their flagship devices such as the new Galaxy S3 (which sports a 4.8» 1280x720 HD Super A
PenTile - even in their flagship devices such as the
new Galaxy S3 (which sports a 4.8» 1280x720 HD Super AMOLED).
The S3 has a 4.8» 1280x720 HD Super AMOLED (with
Pentile), a quad - core 1.4 Ghz CPU (1.5 Ghz dual core in the US), 1 GB of RAM (2 GB in the US) and an 8 mp camera (1080p video) and lot's of
new software features.
We were a little disappointed to hear that the
new 10.1 - inch Galaxy TabPRO has a display with a
PenTile pixel arrangement, meaning it's not...
Newer Super AMOLED displays use a different
PenTile matrix (Diamond Pixel pattern).
Samsung launched two
new phones today for the Korean market - the Galaxy Note LTE and the Galaxy Nexus LTE - and both phones feature Super AMOLED HD displays (with
PenTile technology).
The interesting bit is that it is said that this phone will sport Samsung's
new Super AMOLED HD display rather than the Super AMOLED Plus used in regular S II phones - and that Super AMOLED HD will use
PenTile matrix again.
We know that Samsung said that the
new displays feature 50 % more sub-pixels, and today we confirmed that Samsung no longer uses
Pentile matrix in the
new displays - which is great news - they are using regular RBG.
Samsung claims the
new SuperAMOLED Plus has 50 % more subpixels, if we consider the actual SuperAMOLED on Galaxy S are 800x480
PenTile equivalent, the
new SuperAMOLED Plus should have an equivalent resolution of 1200x720, a reasonable resolution.
SamMobile says the
new screen will have the same resolution, but will no longer have a
PenTile layout, which should improve sharpness, especially in VR.
While the
new screen will keep the same resolution, it will abandon the
PenTile layout to improve performance and sharpness.