08-14-2020 03:52 AM
09-22-2020 02:59 PM
nightmaster552You are mixing up multiple things and trying to prove your point. Blaming Google for the issues on ROG 3 panel. Wow. Do you think they forgot the basics of digital image processing before writing their algo on how different refresh rates will affect the video quality on different panels. I thought black crush is a universal issue that can happen on any oled not just android by google, be it TV, monitor, laptop or mobile. One thing you can blame google off is not centralising the higher refresh rates in android core and deep within, until then it's upto OEM to decide how to tackle. Not sure I understood you correctly. Do you have any source so everyone can also have a read on it and demystify ROG 3 black crush. Please do share.https://zentalk.asus.com/en/discussion/comment/116175#Comment_116175
As it's very clear you don't really understand how technology works let me enlighten you.
The calibration wouldn't work depending on scene or movie, but on brightness setting. Meaning if you eliminate all black crush on 50% brightness with proper settings, all dark scenes are "fixed". Professional devices such as the Sony HX 310 which costs 40.000USD still need hand calibrating as well, this is simply how displays work.
The reason black crush is happening isn't Asus's, Oneplus's or Samsung's fault, the reason black crush is happening is simply because these panels are way to good. Ironicly the panels are able to display so much color, that watching SDR content which is typical on youtube will cause black crush thanks to terrible conversion.
The OLED screens misinterpret colors from SDR content causing these effects to happen. Asus, OP and Samsung are trying to workaround these issues caused by google by playing with gamma settings.
If you want proof, open your youtube application on your phone, type "joker interrogation scene" on youtube, there is 1 video with HDR and another without. You'll notice how the HDR version will have no black crush whatsoever while the SDR version has black crush.
If you want to vent out your anger to someone, then do it at google, blame them for having insufficient conversion and making applications inconsistend by adding a stupid transparent layer to try and workaround true blacks causing black crush. If you watch any SDR content on youtube and rotate your device you'll see how the dark grey is turning real black for a split second as the overlay from google is disabled and reenabled for the rotated mode.
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09-22-2020 03:48 PM
MVIt's not just the Rog panel, there are multiple OLED panels suffering from this issue. You clearly didn't get the memo that even 60hz OLED screens do have black crush as well.https://zentalk.asus.com/en/discussion/comment/116217#Comment_116217
You are mixing up multiple things and trying to prove your point. Blaming Google for the issues on ROG 3 panel. Wow. Do you think they forgot the basics of digital image processing before writing their algo on how different refresh rates will affect the video quality on different panels. I thought black crush is a universal issue that can happen on any oled not just android by google, be it TV, monitor, laptop or mobile. One thing you can blame google off is not centralising the higher refresh rates in android core and deep within, until then it's upto OEM to decide how to tackle. Not sure I understood you correctly. Do you have any source so everyone can also have a read on it and demystify ROG 3 black crush. Please do share.
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09-22-2020 04:12 PM
nightmaster552Again you are mixing things up. What you said can be found all over internet. And I know about the image crashing fiasco. As you seem to have done all the research in the world on oled panels and ready to build a custom kernel and a rom(would love that to happen soon on XDA), I wouldn't argue much, just the fact to consider is ASUS had sometime after Rog2 to calibrate the panel and test it thoroughly with even higher refresh rate before end product was onto users hand and then having a fuss created about it. I would love to have a dedicated post from them about the issue and what they have done so far to ease out the panic everyone is having.https://zentalk.asus.com/en/discussion/comment/116224#Comment_116224
It's not just the Rog panel, there are multiple OLED panels suffering from this issue. You clearly didn't get the memo that even 60hz OLED screens do have black crush as well.
I tested a Motorola One Zoom and it has indeed black crush as well, altho not as "heavy" as the Rog3.
Another thing that I find very curious is that people here seem to have the idea that it's a hardware defect while also saying that the Rog2 had no such issues despite having borderline the same panel, only difference is that the Rog3 has a slightly modified version of the Rog2 panel.
As for the entire "do you really think google forgot basics of image processing".
Go to google and type: "Explained: Why this photo crashes some Android phones".
nuff said. They have plenty room to improve on it and their lazy transparent white overlay they put on chrome and youtube is laughable. Which again, you can test for yourself by starting any youtube video and rotate it.
As for reasons for black crush: Some will be caused by bad gamma levels, some by bad SDR to HDR conversion and others by both. However whats needed for a 100% fix would be a custom gamma level for each individual device and a proper SDR to HDR conversion, once that's in place the OLED panels can be fixed. However due to color shifting in higher brightness, also the feature to set the correct gamma level should be a thing for each brightness level in step of 10%.
This is the only thing Asus could possibly do in order to get the best results possible.
They should also integrate this feature in their setup of the device, taking an image that does a black level test.
Then ask the user to set the gamma level until they can see all numbers from 1 - xx. If they do this, then Asus has already the optimal solution for the black crush issue on their phones from their side. I don't think it's reasonable to assume that Asus knows how to make their own SDR to HDR conversion, however this method will considerably lower black crush to an insignificant level like other phones such as mentioned the Motorolla one zoom.
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09-23-2020 12:06 AM
09-23-2020 03:38 AM