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New rx 9070 automatically adjusting screen brightness/contrast

My current TV is a Sony mini led and it's brilliant, again haven't gone OLED as I game a lot on it with the ps5 pro and falling asleep with static content. Waiting to see their next iteration is either microled or more zones with mini led.

Black smear isn't too bad on my 165hz monitor, it is there but far better than va panels used to be and I prefer the 3000:1 contrast which gives very good black levels (a pet hate of mine with ips)

Personally speaking, I was very fearful of Sony - I used to highly rate them, but I've heard from engineers that fix TV's, to steer well away from them; having had 4 TV's fail in the same year, 2 different brands and over a grand each, I formed a quick first name basis with the warranty repairer - who told me, that Sony's are the worst, so bad, that they don't even try to repair them due to either Sony not providing parts, or knowing that it isn't cost effective, so instead just refund you credit for the TV.
When I was younger however, I drooled over Trinitron's :D
They seem to be very overpriced, for the lack of features you get, versus the other brands - something that personally, really annoyed me; charging 120Hz money for basic 60Hz TV's that are edge lit, for a grand, is pretty ridiculous.
OLED wise, I'm sure they're fine, as that'll be an LG or Samsung panel, that they've paid to use, right? So at that point, I don't see why I'd pay brand tax to have it say Sony?

Hmmm, I guess it's a trade off, of which you can tollerate, be it smearing or contrast, for me smearing simply isn't acceptable, just like ghosting/motion sickness wasn't with previous generations.
I suppose, where I'm yet to experience a VA that beats an IPS in real world, first hand experience, I 'know, no better'? So I will always choose the IPS, versus the smearing of a VA?

Had an OLED LG telly for two and a half years now, no issues and a real game changer.

They have all kinds of features built in to maintain and protect the screen nowadays, as do monitors. I have one of those too, it was gaming on the telly that made me buy it. Loving Arc Raiders on my OLED monitor.

Can understand people still being wary because it's a lot of money.

Just my opinion of course.

Nice, I do want to take the plunge, but as a monitor, and all the babying/built in features to prevent burn in, put me off. I don't want the faff of all that, I want to turn it on, and use it, not run a procedure/operate it for X time at a lower brightness or whatever, nor have to do care taker duty, nor worry that I use it 8 hours straight at a time with either a HUD or icons/taskbar/toolbars etc, on screen static - it's understandably, quite the mindfield, worry wise.

Someone told me in my thread regarding monitors, how I'd have to regulate the brightness of the room if I got an OLED - something I was very shocked by, I was under the assumption that they were way brighter than non OLED panels? To the point it'd be blinding me if anything, not dim?

I suppose there's a lot of misinformation, but if I went OLED, I don't want to compromise, if it's meant to be the best - which is exactly what annoys me with VA; people are forever making excuses for it's negatives, which IMHO, are worse than any mild positives over IPS.

But i'm happy to be proven wrong in person, but I'm yet to experience anything that actually does what it claims, despite the spec sheet - just like people who make fans lie about the noise, then you use one yourself, and find that they're nowhere near 'silent' let alone 'quiet' and the peak noise is more like 50DB versus the mid 30's specified; there's definitely a lot of payoff's going on, when it comes to reviews/affiliation!

For me, in an ideal world, someone just needs to show me in person, something that actually does what it says on the tin, with no babying, that doesn't require babysitting, ala how an IPS is.
 
I want to turn it on, and use it, not run a procedure/operate it for X time at a lower brightness or whatever, nor have to do care taker duty, nor worry that I use it 8 hours straight at a time with either a HUD or icons/taskbar/toolbars etc, on screen static - it's understandably, quite the mindfield, worry wise.
You don't have to do any of that! It does it while the device is off, you never have to run anything.

As for room brightness, I wouldn't have the sun shining on an OLED. But in all other cases it isn't a problem for me.

And Cyberpunk 2077 with full path tracing on an OLED monitor is glorious, albeit at 1440p.
 
You don't have to do any of that! It does it while the device is off, you never have to run anything.

As for room brightness, I wouldn't have the sun shining on an OLED. But in all other cases it isn't a problem for me.

And Cyberpunk 2077 with full path tracing on an OLED monitor is glorious, albeit at 1440p.

Thanks for that! I was under the false pretense, that you'd have to put up with X procedure after X amount of power on time in X session, i.e. 4 hours in, it starts doing XYZ, and dims or does whatever preventative maintainence? That's great if you don't have to do that :D

Why not? I thought one of the main selling points for an OLED, was that it was incredibly bright? Far greater than VA/IPS? Why would I need to worry about keeping it in shade? Let alone regulating a room's brightness - that would be a bit crazy IMHO? After all, I don't have to do that for any other panel that I've owned, be it TV or monitor?
 
Why not? I thought one of the main selling points for an OLED, was that it was incredibly bright? Far greater than VA/IPS? Why would I need to worry about keeping it in shade? Let alone regulating a room's brightness - that would be a bit crazy IMHO? After all, I don't have to do that for any other panel that I've owned, be it TV or monitor?
You're overthinking it. Just use them in a regular brightness room and you're good! Also evening viewing is very relaxing on your eyes, especially at 120hz.

OLED is a game changer because of the infinite contrast, deep blacks, deep colours and lifelike image quality.

I'd find it very difficult to go back to a regular LCD backlit TV or monitor now.
 
You're overthinking it. Just use them in a regular brightness room and you're good! Also evening viewing is very relaxing on your eyes, especially at 120hz.

OLED is a game changer because of the infinite contrast, deep blacks, deep colours and lifelike image quality.

I'd find it very difficult to go back to a regular LCD backlit TV or monitor now.

Thanks for the insight.
Yeah, that's what attracts me to it.

The reason I worry, is because I'm looking for a new monitor, in a thread that I created, and I was told:

There are two main 32" 4k OLED panels out there: one WOLED (from LG) one QD-OLED (from Samsung), up to 240hz.
LG / Samsung sell their panels directly or through third party (Asus, Gigabyte, AOC etc). Each panel has its own pros / cons - on a day-to-day use, they're pretty much identical.
Pricing will depend on where you live: in the UK, the 165hz version of the QD-OLED is usually the cheapest.

I left the various OLED panel saving setting as default and I can't see any issues at all. My usage is around 80% office / 20% gaming & videos.
There are also a bunch of long running stress tests online - check them out as well.

Honestly, regardless of panel choice, I would worry more about the ability to control the room brightness vs life of the OLED.
Either panel is not amazingly bright, so being able to control the room light is almost mandatory.

So the latter part regarding 'controlling the brightness of a room' majorly put me off, TBH. As I shouldn't have to compromise, if I'm buying the best, ala an OLED?
 
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Personally speaking, I was very fearful of Sony - I used to highly rate them, but I've heard from engineers that fix TV's, to steer well away from them; having had 4 TV's fail in the same year, 2 different brands and over a grand each, I formed a quick first name basis with the warranty repairer - who told me, that Sony's are the worst, so bad, that they don't even try to repair them due to either Sony not providing parts, or knowing that it isn't cost effective, so instead just refund you credit for the TV.
When I was younger however, I drooled over Trinitron's :D
They seem to be very overpriced, for the lack of features you get, versus the other brands - something that personally, really annoyed me; charging 120Hz money for basic 60Hz TV's that are edge lit, for a grand, is pretty ridiculous.
OLED wise, I'm sure they're fine, as that'll be an LG or Samsung panel, that they've paid to use, right? So at that point, I don't see why I'd pay brand tax to have it say Sony?

Hmmm, I guess it's a trade off, of which you can tollerate, be it smearing or contrast, for me smearing simply isn't acceptable, just like ghosting/motion sickness wasn't with previous generations.
I suppose, where I'm yet to experience a VA that beats an IPS in real world, first hand experience, I 'know, no better'? So I will always choose the IPS, versus the smearing of a VA?



Nice, I do want to take the plunge, but as a monitor, and all the babying/built in features to prevent burn in, put me off. I don't want the faff of all that, I want to turn it on, and use it, not run a procedure/operate it for X time at a lower brightness or whatever, nor have to do care taker duty, nor worry that I use it 8 hours straight at a time with either a HUD or icons/taskbar/toolbars etc, on screen static - it's understandably, quite the mindfield, worry wise.

Someone told me in my thread regarding monitors, how I'd have to regulate the brightness of the room if I got an OLED - something I was very shocked by, I was under the assumption that they were way brighter than non OLED panels? To the point it'd be blinding me if anything, not dim?

I suppose there's a lot of misinformation, but if I went OLED, I don't want to compromise, if it's meant to be the best - which is exactly what annoys me with VA; people are forever making excuses for it's negatives, which IMHO, are worse than any mild positives over IPS.

But i'm happy to be proven wrong in person, but I'm yet to experience anything that actually does what it claims, despite the spec sheet - just like people who make fans lie about the noise, then you use one yourself, and find that they're nowhere near 'silent' let alone 'quiet' and the peak noise is more like 50DB versus the mid 30's specified; there's definitely a lot of payoff's going on, when it comes to reviews/affiliation!

For me, in an ideal world, someone just needs to show me in person, something that actually does what it says on the tin, with no babying, that doesn't require babysitting, ala how an IPS is.
Never had a Sony TV fail. I have always bought the top end LCD model although sent many back for banding, DSE, dead pixels and many other reasons and not just Sony. I have an incredibly uniform panel now with no DSE or banding but with some off centre blooming in a dark room, which never bothers me as I have prime position. I think I am in a good position now to try OLED in the living room but have been incredibly impressed with Mini LED and how quickly its encroaching on OLED territory so we will see in a few years.

As to the original topic, really hope you get this sorted, I really don't have this issue on my monitor and feel this must be some weird setting somewhere.

EDIT - although now at nearly 50 maybe my eyes will start failing me and I can by the cheapest models :-)
 
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Yeah I don't get that, I don't have to adjust the brightness in my living room or office!

Strange right? It definitely worried me and put me off :P
Nice, I'll have to reconsider then ;)

Never had a Sony TV fail. I have always bought the top end LCD model although sent many back for banding, DSE, dead pixels and many other reasons and not just Sony. I have an incredibly uniform panel now with no DSE or banding but with some off centre blooming in a dark room, which never bothers me as I have prime position. I think I am in a good position now to try OLED in the living room but have been incredibly impressed with Mini LED and how quickly its encroaching on OLED territory so we will see in a few years.

So they have developed faults then? He mentioned the screens either fail or have issues, like you mentioned; and for them are the highest rate of faults/failures that they have come back to them, brand wise :(

They do seem to be very tight with what they offer versus price, worse than Samsung.
I am tempted to go for an OLED next :D
 
Strange right? It definitely worried me and put me off :P
Nice, I'll have to reconsider then ;)



So they have developed faults then? He mentioned the screens either fail or have issues, like you mentioned; and for them are the highest rate of faults/failures that they have come back to them, brand wise :(

They do seem to be very tight with what they offer versus price, worse than Samsung.
I am tempted to go for an OLED next :D

Strange right? It definitely worried me and put me off :P
Nice, I'll have to reconsider then ;)



So they have developed faults then? He mentioned the screens either fail or have issues, like you mentioned; and for them are the highest rate of faults/failures that they have come back to them, brand wise :(

They do seem to be very tight with what they offer versus price, worse than Samsung.
I am tempted to go for an OLED next :D
Quite honestly no, I am just a fussy bugger and I sent any screens back I was not happy with, tried Samsung, LG and Panasonic in my time and always came back to Sony.

Tried lots of Samsung TV's, they crush blacks far too much and lose shadow detail, might be better these days as last one was 3 years ago
 
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Quite honestly no, I am just a fussy bugger and I sent any screens back I was not happy, tried Samsung, LG and Panasonic in my time and always came back to Sony

Panasonic used to be amazing, back in the 1080P days, now they seem to be rubbish and very dim, IIRC many models aren't even made by them now. I've had 2 LG's fail, the first developed 14 dead pixels within a few days of light use, and the 2nd had an entire thick line horizontally of green pixels after 5-6 months!
My mate had a Samsung that he overpaid for, which rewarded him with half the screen being dim and washed out, then stuck/dead pixels after that.
 
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