Are you guys noticing any difference going to 1080p from 1440p?
-Faster UI?
-Less sharp?
-More battery life?
-Other
Or maybe it's just better to stick to 1440p?
Deadeye* said:
Are you guys noticing any difference going to 1080p from 1440p?
-Faster UI?
-Less sharp?
-More battery life?
-Other
Or maybe it's just better to stick to 1440p?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
yeah that's a good question, is there really a need for 1440? do our eyes even see the difference on a small screen? eg on youtube 1080 vs 1440 i dont think I'd see a difference on it lol....
so if we save battery going 1080 I'll make sure mines 1080 when I get it haha..
Related
Is it possible to port this amazing game tuner app to our device?
How useful it is? according to my research...
Game Tuner is a truly useful piece of software? From Samsung? Color me surprised, too, but the company's new Game Tuner app is nothing short of incredibly handy for mobile gamers. As you may well know, playing visually-intensive games on your smartphone can demolish the battery fairly quickly. While most such games render at 1080p even on 2K displays like Samsung's, such resolutions can be big draws on both your remaining juice and your device's processor, causing throttling (and thus slowdowns) and excessive power drain. Samsung's new app lets you have a say in just how graphically hungry those games will be, allowing you to adjust maximum frame rate and resolution scaling.
For example, Hearthstone for Android on a Galaxy S6 edge+ renders at, near as I can tell, 1080p natively. With Samsung's Game Tuner app, you can turn that up to a full 1440p (aka 2K and probably not a great idea!), or all the way down to around 480p. The difference is very real. The frame rate can be adjusted from 15 to 60FPS.
ROGFanatics said:
Is it possible to port this amazing game tuner app to our device?
How useful it is? according to my research...
Game Tuner is a truly useful piece of software? From Samsung? Color me surprised, too, but the company's new Game Tuner app is nothing short of incredibly handy for mobile gamers. As you may well know, playing visually-intensive games on your smartphone can demolish the battery fairly quickly. While most such games render at 1080p even on 2K displays like Samsung's, such resolutions can be big draws on both your remaining juice and your device's processor, causing throttling (and thus slowdowns) and excessive power drain. Samsung's new app lets you have a say in just how graphically hungry those games will be, allowing you to adjust maximum frame rate and resolution scaling.
For example, Hearthstone for Android on a Galaxy S6 edge+ renders at, near as I can tell, 1080p natively. With Samsung's Game Tuner app, you can turn that up to a full 1440p (aka 2K and probably not a great idea!), or all the way down to around 480p. The difference is very real. The frame rate can be adjusted from 15 to 60FPS.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i dont think we need this.our display is already on hd.the lowest best possible so no need for it.redmi 3 battery life is superb so i relly think we dont need this app.
jokerpappu said:
i dont think we need this.our display is already on hd.the lowest best possible so no need for it.redmi 3 battery life is superb so i relly think we dont need this app.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Actually our device is running on 1080p which is FHD ... by this app we can adjust the quality of the game and adjust the framerate for more smoother experience ...
ROGFanatics said:
Actually our device is running on 1080p which is FHD ... by this app we can adjust the quality of the game and adjust the framerate for more smoother experience ...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
we have an hd screen and you are saying FHD ???how is that.games run on 720p not 1080p on our devices.so dont say things like that
FHD = 1080p
HD = 720p
The redmi 3/pro is a 720p screen resolution. I think the framerate adjustment might be helpful depending on games that arent necessary to have high end graphics but still dont run as well as they could
bikerboi85 said:
FHD = 1080p
HD = 720p
The redmi 3/pro is a 720p screen resolution. I think the framerate adjustment might be helpful depending on games that arent necessary to have high end graphics but still dont run as well as they could
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
IM sorry wrong thread i have redmi note 3 pro im so sorry!
jokerpappu said:
we have an hd screen and you are saying FHD ???how is that.games run on 720p not 1080p on our devices.so dont say things like that
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
IM sorry wrong thread .
Hi,
1st off I love this phone. I am extremely pleased and have zero complaints so far. Buttery smooth too....
My Question is how is it possible that the screen resolution is adjustable? Does the display turn off pixels? Does it merge pixels? Please enlighten me..
Thanks,
Joel
I'm pretty sure it must be 'rooted' first to allow those changes.
old_fart said:
I'm pretty sure it must be 'rooted' first to allow those changes.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry even though u r pretty sure. This info is wrong. U DON'T need root. Just like samsung graxe ui. On LG V30 u go to display - screen resolution and switch between 720,1080 or qhd+.
But the OP never asked if changing resolution was possible. He most know that we can already change res in the setting. What he is asking is HOW does lowering resolution works.
Im not sure about this but from tv or any pc monitor u can upscale to max reolution of the monitor or downscale to a lower resolution. The pixel are still on but the screen is not push very hard.
Amoled are very power effecient and this has been discuss in the S8 forum for quite sometimes. After all the testing the xda members have been doing it seems that going from QHD down to 1080(full hd +). Doesnt save that much battery (around 5% better battery)
Actually I'm wondering because on a 1080p TV, when you feed it a 720p video, the TV stays 1080p. The video is just enlarged to fit the 1080p display. On the V30 I'm under the impression that the display will actually change. Kinda like having a 3 displays in 1...
jjcorral said:
Actually I'm wondering because on a 1080p TV, when you feed it a 720p video, the TV stays 1080p. The video is just enlarged to fit the 1080p display. On the V30 I'm under the impression that the display will actually change. Kinda like having a 3 displays in 1...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
U wont see a smaller screen. The screen will stretch out edge to edge but it will look very blurry if u do 720p. Not so much in 1080p mode. So u can say that the software upcales lower resolution. Just like riptide 2 which u can lower or max res in the setting of the game.
Wait, so the software downscales? You sure? Just Android or all apps too? I don't think so. How could software down scaling effect battery life?
jjcorral said:
Wait, so the software downscales? You sure? Just Android or all apps too? I don't think so. How could software down scaling effect battery life?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The screen is cap at 60 hz. Let say u are playing a game ( this goes with the ui smoothness aswell). Since the screen is cap at 60hz means that the fps is up to 60fps max/cap At 1080p is you play a game that can reach 80fps(cause is not pushing QHD pixel) the cpu/gpu doesnt have to work has hard. So instead of doing 80fps it only have to do 60fps meaning that cpu/gpu doesnt have to work 100% since is able to maintain easily the frame per second require from the 60hz screen.
This is why the new RAZER phone with 120hz screen can do 120fps.
Now if u increase the screen to qhd (1440p+). The same game with higher resolution the frame rate will be much lower. Now. The game probably is reaching 55fps instead of 80fps max (is an example). The screen is 60hz (60fps). So the cpu/gpu is gonna be working 100%. Much harder cause is trying to reach 60fps but it cant. Which equals more power comsuption, hotter device and also cpu/gpu throlling cause of the heat.
Is there an option to do the resolution lower for the screen like the S7 and s8/+ has? I run my s7 on 1280x720 and it seems the battery lasts a lot longer with that selected as opposed to qhd resolution.
20degrees said:
Is there an option to do the resolution lower for the screen like the S7 and s8/+ has? I run my s7 on 1280x720 and it seems the battery lasts a lot longer with that selected as opposed to qhd resolution.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Go to settings, then display scroll down to you see screen resolution and you can change it.
20degrees said:
Is there an option to do the resolution lower for the screen like the S7 and s8/+ has? I run my s7 on 1280x720 and it seems the battery lasts a lot longer with that selected as opposed to qhd resolution.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you try this out and notice a decent amount of difference please let us know. I'm curious about the savings.
Sent from my LG-H932 using Tapatalk
psawjack said:
If you try this out and notice a decent amount of difference please let us know. I'm curious about the savings.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It'll be a while. The phone arrives today. If it's problem free, I'll use it with the default at first. Then I'll try this to compare. ?
I'm hoping it has no screen issues.
The Samsung Galaxy Note 9 has a crazy crisp display. Just kidding, this is automated text so who knows if this screen is any good. So, you be the judge! A higher rating indicates that it's extremely sharp and clear, and that you cannot see pixels with your naked eye.
Then, drop a comment if you have anything to add!
Yes it great I got it
Love my Note 9
HDR Content with the combination of 1440P on youtube looks crystal clear. It is Definitely Beautiful.
Easily the best screen on any phone or tablet. Haven't seen anything even on paper even close.
The clarity looks awesome but FHD+ looks a bit down and when you go up to WQHD+ the battery consumption is crazy.
xi911 said:
The clarity looks awesome but FHD+ looks a bit down and when you go up to WQHD+ the battery consumption is crazy.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm curious. Is there really a difference in battery between the 2 resolutions?
mariojp said:
I'm curious. Is there really a difference in battery between the 2 resolutions?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yep theres a huge difference like about 25%
xi911 said:
Yep theres a huge difference like about 25%
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I Wonder has anyone actually tested this out? One would figure the higher one would burn more battery but a whole 25% increase? Sheesh lol
Amazing! Even better than my s7!
i felt it has less pixel . played 1080P video also . it doesnt feel it has 500+ pixel phone , i think we have to play more that 1080p video to get maximum output
demandarin said:
I Wonder has anyone actually tested this out? One would figure the higher one would burn more battery but a whole 25% increase? Sheesh lol
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
HI...
I didn't found some big differences with battery life using FHD+ and WQHD+...
Running few days on each one the difference between them was in range from 1hr02min till 1hr45min with battery usage... I mean for example time between charging on FHD+ was 18hr35min and on WQHD+ was 17hr20min with the same time frame...
I feel like the display quality is smooth, too smooth perhaps.
Things do not seem as crispy like on other phones like the 2 year old Galaxy s7
Is it just me or does it seem that the Note 8 has the much better display than the Note 9? As the Note 9's display seems to be brighter than the Note 8 while the overall visual quality is good. It is just the brightness even when the brightness is adjusted the same as the Note 8's display is much brighter than the Note 8.
I was just wondering what display settings does everyone use and how to get the best performance out of the display. If anyone can tell me all the things to turn on and off for getting there, it would be great.
Thanks
Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk
I use the best settings possible, what's the point In having a good phone with the best display if you ain't gonna use it
Exactly. When you say best performance, what are you looking for? Higher synthetic benchmark scores to brag to your friends who also don't understand benchmarks, or the best looking display to actually USE the phone?
Do what makes sense for you. I keep mine on HD+ (720 pixels in the short direction) because my eyesight isn't great and I can't tell the difference. Samsung pushes the higher resolution because it looks good on paper (specsmanship), however I am doubtful that most people (even with good eyesight) can tell the difference between FHD (1080) and WQHD (1440) pm this size phone.
Other people don't matter, check for yourself. I would look at straight diagonal lines and text. If it looks jagged, then go to higher resolution. If not then try lower resolution.
There is a small battery gain from using lower resolution. You can see what Samsung thinks the battery gain is by going to the battery power saving screen and note the savings projected in the "apply" button at the bottom. Change the screen resolution and the projected savings in the apply button will change immediately. The change in projected savings between two modes presumably represents the difference in power consumption that Samsung estimates. For me it is rough ballpark 10 minute life saving from 1440 to 1080 and another 10 minute saving from 1080 to 720 (when checked with battery near full)
centrezuk said:
I use the best settings possible, what's the point In having a good phone with the best display if you ain't gonna use it
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I agree with you. I believe that's what my original question was. What are the settings which will give me the best display performance?
SquireSCA said:
Exactly. When you say best performance, what are you looking for? Higher synthetic benchmark scores to brag to your friends who also don't understand benchmarks, or the best looking display to actually USE the phone?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I was referring to display performance, which includes having the best visually appealing display settings. I do not care about any benchmark scores. I believe most people have stopped caring about that a while back.
electricpete1 said:
Do what makes sense for you. I keep mine on HD+ (720 pixels in the short direction) because my eyesight isn't great and I can't tell the difference. Samsung pushes the higher resolution because it looks good on paper (specsmanship), however I am doubtful that most people (even with good eyesight) can tell the difference between FHD (1080) and WQHD (1440) pm this size phone.
Other people don't matter, check for yourself. I would look at straight diagonal lines and text. If it looks jagged, then go to higher resolution. If not then try lower resolution.
There is a small battery gain from using lower resolution. You can see what Samsung thinks the battery gain is by going to the battery power saving screen and note the savings projected in the "apply" button at the bottom. Change the screen resolution and the projected savings in the apply button will change immediately. The change in projected savings between two modes presumably represents the difference in power consumption that Samsung estimates. For me it is rough ballpark 10 minute life saving from 1440 to 1080 and another 10 minute saving from 1080 to 720 (when checked with battery near full)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks. I do keep my resolution at WQHD at all times. I was wondering about all the other settings such as Settings -> Device Maintenance -> Performance Mode -> High Performance (I've heard this is needed to get the best display) and other things such as what screen mode looks the best and most saturated (Adaptive, AMOLED cinema, AMOLED photo, etc.) or if there are any other settings.
Guys what settings you keep in adaptive display?
The difference between HD and wqhd is easily noticeable, I have mine on mac settings and the screen is stunning
Sent from my SM-G965F using Tapatalk