The Samsung KU6300 serves as a good alternative to the Sony X800D we discussed above and offers
a slightly brighter image and is also available in more (and larger) screen sizes.
Not exact matches
In fluorescent lighting exactly like that on a cheap motel — there's even a
slightly tilted
bright yellow star in one corner — the
image is set in the evening sky, wrapped in the deep purple of the last moments of dusk.
This cloud is the
bright Milky Way patch
slightly above the center of our
image; among many other Deep Sky objects (clusters and nebulae) one can find 10 more Messier objects in this
image.
I have put your
image in two different color circles above - left shows you with the
brighter tones from the Autumn swatch and, right, with some
slightly deeper tones.
The overall
image is sharper and
brighter than the previous Blu - ray transfer, with
slightly different framing as well.
The
image vacillates between showing a warm look to a
slightly faded look (illustrating the heat of the locations), but its never overly
bright.
The result is that the iPad mini 4's screen, which also has an antireflective coating, is easier to use in
bright light or sunlight and displays
slightly sharper
images than the screen on the standard iPad.
In flash pictures without additional lighting,
images have good detail preservation, accurate white balance, and good color rendering, but are a little over-exposed; further, the flash is
slightly off - center, so
images are
brighter on the left side of the frame.
Some points were dropped for
slightly washed - out color in HDR exposures and visible color shading in both
bright and low light -
images.
Importantly,
images retain good levels of detail outdoors in
bright lighting and
slightly improved on its forerunner, but — despite the extra pixels - in low light levels detail preservation is no different.
Both phones produce good - looking
images in daylight, though the Pixel delivers a
brighter, more vibrant
image, with
slightly warmer colors too.