Also, I'd like to point out that a retina iPad mini, meaning a 7.9 inch iPad with the same resolution as the 9.7 inch iPad, would have practically
the same pixel per inch rating as the 2013 Nexus 7.
Not exact matches
Its 9.7 -
inch screen has a resolution of 2048 by 1536
pixels (a total of four times the
pixels in the
same space), or 264
pixels per inch.
At 360x480 resolution in portrait and
pixel per inch density of 187, it's essentially the
same display that was on the original Torch 9800.
What is especially news worthy and significant is that the performance of the OLED display on a flexible plastic substrate for the Galaxy S6 edge + is now essentially the
same as on a traditional glass substrate for the Galaxy Note 5, even at 500 +
pixels per inch and 2560x1440 resolution.
What is especially news worthy and significant is that the performance of the OLED display on a flexible plastic substrate for the Galaxy S7 Edge is now essentially the
same as on a traditional glass substrate for the Galaxy S7, even at 500 +
pixels per inch and 2560x1440 resolution.
Here we're looking at an 8 -
inch 1536 x 2048
pixel Super AMOLED display with 320
pixels per inch density, whereas the Tab S2 9.7 has a 264
pixel per inch density due to having the
same resolution and a larger screen.
The Galaxy S7 Edge has a somewhat larger 5.5
inch screen, but has the
same 2560x1440 resolution with 535
pixels per inch.
sizes, both tablets offer the
same pixel density of 264
pixels per inch (ppi), corresponding to 3.7 million and 5.6 million
pixels, respectively.
With a 1280 x 800
pixel resolution, it translates into a quite impressive 216
pixels per square
inch, which is the
same as the segment leader Nexus 7.
Moreover, despite their notable size difference,
pixel density between the two devices is the
same at 300
pixels per inch.
At the
same time, the iPad mini's resolution of 163
pixels per inch is a disappointment, especially when you consider that both the Nexus 7 and the Kindle Fire HD have
pixel densities of 216
pixels per inch.
The slightly larger 5.1 ″ Super AMOLED display is the
same resolution as its predecessor, and being larger means that the
pixels -
per -
inch count is lower at 432 ppi vs. 441 ppi.
At 800 x 480
pixels, the resolution on the Evo 4G is the
same as the 3.7 -
inch HTC Droid Incredible and Motorola Droid, so you're getting the
same amount of
pixels per inch in a bigger space.
The new 1920x1200 resolution display packs in 323
pixels per inch (PPI), giving it virtually the
same screen quality as both the Nexus 7 and the iPad Mini 2.
The iPad Mini 2 also gained a 2048x1536 resolution Retina Display, which, combined with the larger 7.9 -
inch screen size, gives the iPad Mini's roughly the
same pixels -
per -
inch as the Kindle Fire HDX and Google Nexus 7.
Notice,
pixels per inch (ppi) isn't the
same thing as file size.
Even Amazon's late, great Fire HD 6 has a better - looking screen because it has the
same resolution as the HD 8 but packs it into a 6 -
inch space at a denser 252 ppi (
pixels per inch).
That works out to 300
pixels per inch, which is the
same ppi as the Kindle Voyage.
The new Kindle Paperwhite adds our highest resolution Paperwhite display, delivering the
same 300
pixels per inch that readers love about the top - of - the - line Kindle Voyage.
The 7.9 -
inch Retina display is the
same size as every iPad mini before and has the
same 2,048 x 1,536 resolution at 264
pixels per inch as the mini 2 and mini 3.
Despite the jump in screen size from 6 to 7
inches, giving 30 percent more room for text, Amazon says the device retains the
same 300
pixels -
per -
inch sharpness of its predecessor.
Its bigger brother is the 9
inch NOOK HD which comes with at least 16 GB of storage, a 1920 x 1280 — 256
pixels per inch display and the
same OMAP 4470 CPU, but this time clocked at 1.5 GHz.
The display uses the
same 6 -
inch, 167 -
pixel -
per -
inch resolution touch screen as the last Kindle, which looks fine, but it's nowhere near as sharp as the 300ppi screen on the Kobo Glo HD, Kindle Oasis, Kindle Paperwhite, or Kindle Voyage.
E Ink is pretty much the only game in town these days, and sure enough, the Glo HD wore the
same Carta display to this year's e-reader party (how embarrassing) as the Voyage, sporting a stellar 300
pixels per inch (PPI).
the new Paperwhite's screen is now the
same high - contrast, 300
pixels per inch (PPI) marvel you'll find on the much more expensive Kindle Voyage
They both sport the
same 7 -
inch VividView Color Touchscreen IPS displays with 1024 x 600
pixels resolution and 169 PPI (
pixels per inch).
It's no wonder that most consumers with decent home theater systems feel like they're getting an equal or better experience to the movie theater: WITH THE EXCEPTION OF A FEW MORE HORIZONTAL
PIXELS, THE IMAGE IS EXACTLY THE SAME RESOLUTION IN 1080P and 2K, and the pixel density (measured in PPI or pixels per inch) is quite a bit denser on a consumer 1080p di
PIXELS, THE IMAGE IS EXACTLY THE
SAME RESOLUTION IN 1080P and 2K, and the
pixel density (measured in PPI or
pixels per inch) is quite a bit denser on a consumer 1080p di
pixels per inch) is quite a bit denser on a consumer 1080p display.
Although the screen size has been bumped up from the 5.2
inches found on the standard P9, the resolution remains the
same at 1920 × 1080, this means the P9 Plus has a
pixel density of 401
pixels per inch.
It's the
same 5 -
inch laminated HD display that packs around 296
pixels per inch.
It's essentially the
same Super LCD 3 display panel, but.03
inches bigger (therefore providing fewer
pixels -
per -
inch).
With the
same resolution however, this means there are more
pixels packed into the Compact's display
per inch compared to the larger model, with their
pixel densities sitting at 483ppi and 424ppi, respectively.
What's more, this device has the
same dots
per inch as the larger
Pixel released this year.
It's again protected by Corning Gorilla Glass with the
same AMOLED technology behind it, but the 1080p Full HD resolution makes for a much crisper screen with 423
pixels per inch.
On the 5.7 -
inch display (also the
same), that results in an impressive 518
pixels per inch, which is overkill for everyday use.
The 9.7 -
inch model got a resolution of 2048 x 1536
pixels rather than the 2732 x 2048
pixel screen of the 12.9 -
inch version, but the
pixels -
per -
inch rating is the
same on both.
That translates to barely more than 81
pixels per inch, 40 less
per inch than a 2,560 x 1,440 display of the
same size and three times fewer than Apple's fancy new Retina iMac.
Both have the
same resolution at 2960 x 1440
pixels, but the picture on the S8 may appear sharper because it packs in more
pixels per inch.
Both phones have the
same pixels -
per -
inch measurement, so you shouldn't see a sharpness difference between the two.
Because the size of 5.7 -
inches remained the
same on both devices, we have a jump from 386
Pixels -
Per - Inch (PPI) to 515 PPI on the Note 4.
The Galaxy Note 7 sports the
same 5.7 -
inch Super AMOLED QHD display with the addition the dual curved edge, giving it a resolution of 2560 x 1440
pixels and 518
pixels -
per -
inch (PPI.)
At 1136 x 640
pixels, the iPhone SE's screen actually sports the
same number of
pixels per inch as the 1334 x 750 panel on the iPhone 6s.
Give or take 15
pixels per inch, the MediaPad Pro offers practically the
same sharpness as Apple's award - winning 10.5 -
inch iPad Pro.
Here we're looking at an 8 -
inch 1536 x 2048
pixel Super AMOLED display with 320
pixels per inch density, whereas the Tab S2 9.7 has a 264
pixel per inch density due to having the
same resolution and a larger screen.
As
per the rumors, the 5T will come with the
same hardware specs and features as its predecessor, but the design will change to accommodate a bigger 6 -
inch display screen with a full HD + resolution and 18:9 aspect ratio, much like what you see on the LG G6, LG V30 and the soon to be released Google
Pixel 2 XL, among others.
It sports the
same sized a 5.1 -
inch display as last year's model, but is now QHD with an increase in resolution to 2560 x 1440
pixels and 577
pixels -
per -
inch (PPI) compared to QHD display with 524 PPI on the Galaxy Note Edge.
The specifications are relatively the
same, the only main difference is the screen size and the display's 360
pixels per inch.
The Xperia Z4 sports the
same 5.2 -
inch IPS LCD FHD display with a resolution of 1920 x 1080
pixels and 424
pixels -
per -
inch (PPI) as its predecessor.
It uses the
same display tech as the Droid DNA, but HTC's condensed this 1080p panel into a 4.7 -
inch space, making it sharper than ever, at 468
pixels per inch.
Screen sizes aside the resolution will be the
same on all three of them, though the smallest of the three, the 8.4 -
inch model, will come with a ppi (
pixels per inch) of 359 while the other two come with a ppi of 280, due to the larger screen size.
Kuo also predicted the 6.5 -
inch model would offer a
pixel density of between 480 and 500ppi, the 5.8 -
inch will offer 458ppi, which is the
same as the current iPhone X, and the 6.1 -
inch model would have between 320 and 330
pixels per inch.