The Faceless Master
Member
Im using kies official and the official cable..
try using a quality 3rd party USB cable. Samsung USB cables suck.
Im using kies official and the official cable..
The source link just says Mac, Windows and Linux...
My GS2 has screen issues (and the one it replaced was even worse), but the screen's black levels are so good that for my next phone I don't think I'll be able to switch to anything that doesn't have an OLED.An advice for anyone who wants to buy a new smartphone:
DO NOT BUY A PHONE WITH (S)AMOLED SCREEN.
Galaxy S2 owner here and now thanks to this screen i hate this phone, the (S)AMOLED screens have a lot of problems an in my opinion the technology isn't mature enough for mass production, every phone i've seen with (s)amoled screens (Nexus S's, Galaxy S's, Galaxy S2s, Lumia 800's and Galaxy Note) have a series of defects that obviously can't be connected to bad luck like someone would say to you...
The problems i've seen are these:
Discoloration (the screen presents discoloration, from what i've seen most of the times the discoloration tends to be pinkish)
Color sensitive discolorations (like above but this appear only when the on the screen are displayed some colors, the most noticeable are the yellow spot when gray is displayed, usually it's on the sides of the screen)
Image retention (the screen will have a retention of the previously displayed image if it was darker than the current one)
Also a lot of them are Pentile screens which means less subpixel and not the same color fidelity of the RGB ones (but this isn't a defect per se but more lika a characteristic of some displays)
Obviously the technology have tempting qualities such as way more vivid and warmer colors and (even if it isn't too noticeable) better power consumptions but that's it, they have problems and like i said isn't bad luck because i sent the phone 2 times to Samsung to change the screen and every phone with (s)amoled i've seen had at least 2 of the problem i've listed.
Obviously this message is to the people that hate to have a not perfect screen and have to pay a lot of money to have a product that have such defects that aren't mentioned most of the times in reviews and such, for the people who can get over these problems good for them because aside from the problem mentioned before they are stunning screens...
I hope this could help someone and sorry for the bad English ( it took 30 mins to write this :/ )
An advice for anyone who wants to buy a new smartphone:
DO NOT BUY A PHONE WITH (S)AMOLED SCREEN.
Galaxy S2 owner here and now thanks to this screen i hate this phone, the (S)AMOLED screens have a lot of problems an in my opinion the technology isn't mature enough for mass production, every phone i've seen with (s)amoled screens (Nexus S's, Galaxy S's, Galaxy S2s, Lumia 800's and Galaxy Note) have a series of defects that obviously can't be connected to bad luck like someone would say to you...
The problems i've seen are these:
Discoloration (the screen presents discoloration, from what i've seen most of the times the discoloration tends to be pinkish)
Color sensitive discolorations (like above but this appear only when the on the screen are displayed some colors, the most noticeable are the yellow spot when gray is displayed, usually it's on the sides of the screen)
Image retention (the screen will have a retention of the previously displayed image if it was darker than the current one)
Also a lot of them are Pentile screens which means less subpixel and not the same color fidelity of the RGB ones (but this isn't a defect per se but more lika a characteristic of some displays)
Obviously the technology have tempting qualities such as way more vivid and warmer colors and (even if it isn't too noticeable) better power consumptions but that's it, they have problems and like i said isn't bad luck because i sent the phone 2 times to Samsung to change the screen and every phone with (s)amoled i've seen had at least 2 of the problem i've listed.
Obviously this message is to the people that hate to have a not perfect screen and have to pay a lot of money to have a product that have such defects that aren't mentioned most of the times in reviews and such, for the people who can get over these problems good for them because aside from the problem mentioned before they are stunning screens...
I hope this could help someone and sorry for the bad English ( it took 30 mins to write this :/ )
An advice for anyone who wants to buy a new smartphone:
DO NOT BUY A PHONE WITH (S)AMOLED SCREEN.
Galaxy S2 owner here and now thanks to this screen i hate this phone, the (S)AMOLED screens have a lot of problems an in my opinion the technology isn't mature enough for mass production, every phone i've seen with (s)amoled screens (Nexus S's, Galaxy S's, Galaxy S2s, Lumia 800's and Galaxy Note) have a series of defects that obviously can't be connected to bad luck like someone would say to you...
The problems i've seen are these:
Discoloration (the screen presents discoloration, from what i've seen most of the times the discoloration tends to be pinkish)
Color sensitive discolorations (like above but this appear only when the on the screen are displayed some colors, the most noticeable are the yellow spot when gray is displayed, usually it's on the sides of the screen)
Image retention (the screen will have a retention of the previously displayed image if it was darker than the current one)
Also a lot of them are Pentile screens which means less subpixel and not the same color fidelity of the RGB ones (but this isn't a defect per se but more lika a characteristic of some displays)
Obviously the technology have tempting qualities such as way more vivid and warmer colors and (even if it isn't too noticeable) better power consumptions but that's it, they have problems and like i said isn't bad luck because i sent the phone 2 times to Samsung to change the screen and every phone with (s)amoled i've seen had at least 2 of the problem i've listed.
Obviously this message is to the people that hate to have a not perfect screen and have to pay a lot of money to have a product that have such defects that aren't mentioned most of the times in reviews and such, for the people who can get over these problems good for them because aside from the problem mentioned before they are stunning screens...
I hope this could help someone and sorry for the bad English ( it took 30 mins to write this :/ )
The stuff he mentioned affects phones straight out of the box, they're not problems that develop over time.The reason reviews don't mention it is more that they're only running with the phone for 2-4 weeks, if that.
You've never had any burn-in?Apparently I'm blessed with really crappy eyes (or excellent luck), because my Captivate, Droid Charge, Galaxy SII, Galaxy SII-SR, Galaxy Nexus and Galaxy Note that I use currently, or have in the past, all seem to have pretty awesome screens, IMO.
You've never had any burn-in?
Yeah, it's a big problem from my experience.AMOLED has burn in? I am not the biggest fan of the problems my GS2 screen has, but burn in has never been an issue..
AMOLED has burn in? I am not the biggest fan of the problems my GS2 screen has, but burn in has never been an issue..
The source link just says Mac, Windows and Linux...
git.videolan.org said:Core:
* Major Video Core and Outputs rework and rewrite:
Subtitles, subpictures and OSD can now be sized and blent inside outputs
x11 (Unix), OpenGL (Unix) and Direct3D (Windows) are such video outputs.
* Almost every video filter can now be transcoded
* Playback rate doesn't get resetted to 1 between items anymore
* Option --sub-filter was renamed --sub-source
* Port to Android, iOS, OS/2 and Win64.
You've never had any burn-in?
He appears to have burned a hole in his wallet...
Dude you are the 1%. I've had 4 amoled/samoled screens. The vast majority of people who have bought amoled products love them. Not mature enough for the market???? If you are a screen perfectionist you will find faults in all screens. Light bleed, brightness, contrast, ability to show natural colours. There is no such thing as the perfect display. 99% of the public don't obsess over this stuff
Those of us who spend too much time on internet forums do. Worse still it breeds. People who were happy with their screens start to doubt. Then it by becomes like a reverse placebo. Finally you can no longer enjoy a product because you are always looking for the slightest imperfection. My friendly advice?
Relax...
As Android exploded and began to be used on larger screens (Tablets) as well as whole new form factors (TVs, Automobiles, etc ); the User Experience failed to evolve to truly support the new environments. The experience from the 3 inch screen was just magnified up to 10 inches in some cases.
Onskreen created Cornerstone to translate Androids user experience to the larger screens and enable users to use multiple Android Applications at once. Gone are the days of trying to switch back and forth, and wasted screen real estate. Cornerstone lets Android shine on larger screens of all types.
View and interact with multiple applications at once. Tablets with Cornerstone enable true multi-tasking, utilizing the screen real estate to let users choose which applications are open and active at any time.
Check out how Onskreen can help your organization make Cornerstone work for you.
Running this on my 10.1 right now. Definitely needs a bit of a tune-up, but lots of potential and I look forward to having it in CM9
boner am total
I'm not by any means a screen perfectionist since i don't even have any knowledge on the topic i'm only against evident problems, i didn't have to look up on internet about the problems of the screen, i found it myself one day pulling down the notification screen and using as lockscreen an image with dark stripes which caused the image retention then i checked my friend's phone and i saw that all the (s)amoled have these problem.
I only wanted to warn more people possible since the reviews and people never mention these problems because they're captured by the good sides of the screen.
I've done that post because too many times i've seen people who were not happy with the (s)amoled and the others went against these person because "AMOLED RULEZ, LOOK AT THE COLORS STOP THIS BULLSHIT" (this is not directed to you) and this create ignorance... you can get over these problems? good but at least i informed you about the problems so you can make the decision of buying a phone with all the information possible.
For me a technology that have visible and evident problems like these in that high quantity (100% of the time in my case, never seen an (S)AMOLED without problems) isn't ready for mass market just like weren't ready old plasmas tv years ago.
boner am total
Dianne Hackborn - Okay, let me please please beg you not to do this. I can guarantee you this introduces all kinds of application compatibility issues. We work really hard to give our developers a consistent environment where their apps will operate correctly across all the devices Market runs on, not being impacted by negative reviews from bad devices that they should not have to deal specially with.
If you start making your own distributions of Android behaving in such fundamentally different ways, I suspect we are going to need to start doing things to prevent you from impacting our app ecosystem. I'm not sure what, but I could imagine things such as restricting how users can interact with Market apps on these devices (not allowing reviews or such).
We have let a lot of things in this area slide -- for example to be allowed to include Market on your device you are supposed to fully pass CTS. However, if you start really diverging from the core Android platform (I would argue this takes you well into the realm of a fork rather than a customization) then some deep issues are going to come up about how we handle these custom builds.
We have been putting a lot of thought and work for a number of years into how to let Android applications run on increasingly diverse and dynamic screens. Doing this correctly, without impacting our app developers in a negative way, is a really challenging problem. I also think it is something that needs to be done at the mainline platform level, not as a customization, because doing it right is going to require new well defined interfaces with applications for them to interact with it, possibly starting with just a facility they need to use to opt in to it.
Collapse this comment
5:59 PM +9
Steve Kondik - +Dianne Hackborn This is definitely not something we'd turn on by default under any circumstance for all the reasons you are stating. I still think it's definitely a useful feature for those that want to use it though, and like I said, it needs a lot of polish.
Aw shit veiled threat right there with talk about the Market and CTS.
Yes but you assume you are the norm. You aren't. I know this because my job is to sell mobile phones for a living. In fact technically I manage a team that does this. I have never had a single person come back to me with an amoled or super amoled screen in the last 4 years to complain of screen quality. Whilst I'm not suggesting that samoled is perfect neither is lcd. If it was as much of an issue for other people as you seem to think it is (and you are entitled to warn people, but frankly I think you are over egging the pudding) then I would have expected to see customers coming back in to complain of image retention, burn in etc etc. The fact is they don't. Not because it never happens but because the issue is temporary and not enough to spoil the enjoyment of the device enough for them to complain. I've also never had a person come back to complain that they don't want to ever buy a device with an amoled screen again, because of their experience. Clearly for you it is an issue, but that is why you are the 1%.
I apologise If I leapt to the conclusion you were influenced by the internet, but the internet is full of people who bang on about (for example) pentile like it's the end of the world. My Nexus S was pentile and so was the Galaxy S. Uber geeks worry about this stuff not the vast majority of people. If people were to have any beef with amoled screens (pre samoled) It would be outdoor visibility under bright light. I could barely see my Nexus One screen on a sunny day. That I had occasional complaints about on the HTC Desire. But the truth is that the great majority really like the punch and contrast of amoled products which frankly blows LCD out of the water. As the technology advances things will get even better, however the product is more than mature enough for the market and frankly samoled is one of the things that actually draws people to buy Samsung smart phones.
I don't retract my statement, but I might alter it to a "semi."boner am total
Despite these things I cannot get over the incredible blacks and popping colors. I can't wait for my next phone to be an RGB 720P SAMOLED.
Dianne is 100% right.
An advice for anyone who wants to buy a new smartphone:
DO NOT BUY A PHONE WITH (S)AMOLED SCREEN.
Galaxy S2 owner here and now thanks to this screen i hate this phone, the (S)AMOLED screens have a lot of problems an in my opinion the technology isn't mature enough for mass production, every phone i've seen with (s)amoled screens (Nexus S's, Galaxy S's, Galaxy S2s, Lumia 800's and Galaxy Note) have a series of defects that obviously can't be connected to bad luck like someone would say to you...
The problems i've seen are these:
Discoloration (the screen presents discoloration, from what i've seen most of the times the discoloration tends to be pinkish)
Color sensitive discolorations (like above but this appear only when the on the screen are displayed some colors, the most noticeable are the yellow spot when gray is displayed, usually it's on the sides of the screen)
Image retention (the screen will have a retention of the previously displayed image if it was darker than the current one)
Also a lot of them are Pentile screens which means less subpixel and not the same color fidelity of the RGB ones (but this isn't a defect per se but more lika a characteristic of some displays)
Obviously the technology have tempting qualities such as way more vivid and warmer colors and (even if it isn't too noticeable) better power consumptions but that's it, they have problems and like i said isn't bad luck because i sent the phone 2 times to Samsung to change the screen and every phone with (s)amoled i've seen had at least 2 of the problem i've listed.
Obviously this message is to the people that hate to have a not perfect screen and have to pay a lot of money to have a product that have such defects that aren't mentioned most of the times in reviews and such, for the people who can get over these problems good for them because aside from the problem mentioned before they are stunning screens...
I hope this could help someone and sorry for the bad English ( it took 30 mins to write this :/ )
Is it really that bad? I was considering getting an S2 to replace my N1
I'm excited. Finally I can have my MSN client and web browser running on the same page. It's the main thing that has annoyed me about using tablets in general and now there's a solution.
EDIT: And if Google has a problem with it not being standard how about they start working on a similar feature themselves. It will dramatically increase productivity on tablet devices without a doubt.
So my mum got a new phone and for some random reason, in a house with apple everywhere, she decided she wanted an android phone.
It's a new model samsung galaxy xcover (hard to find actual bloody info on it), It's running 2.3.6 and seems like there's no update to .7 for it, No biggie.
I can't for the life of me figure out how to enable the phone to continue to beep, say every 2 minutes, when there's a missed call or message. Is there any damn way to do this?
There also seems to be no clean bootrom for it either which is a shame. I would love to remove all the crap that comes with it to speed it up a little bit.