Friday 13 September 2013

The new NOTE 10.1 consumes 30% less power with the PenTile RG-BW LCD display


The new NOTE 10.1 consumes 30% less power with the PenTile RG-BW LCD display


The new Note 10.1 2014 Edition is a glossy piece of gear. We adage it at IFA previous week and we cherished its tremendous snappish display and thin profile, and then there’s the S Pen and all the artistic things that you can do with it.
With its fake leather finish, the new Note 10.1 looks appealing chic on the exterior, but its entrails are just as intelligent. Among them is the 10.1-inch LCD display, which according to industry sources cited by the Korean news porch DDaily, uses 30 percent a lesser amount of power than usual LCD screens of the similar size, thanks to its RG-BW sub pixel pact.
Quick justification is that unlike AMOLED screens, which are self-illuminating, LCD displays boast a backlight, which is a generally a white LED. To illustrate all the beautiful colors our eyes can detect, the light goes all the way through a range of pixels, each one of them made up of several sub pixels. In general, LCD panels have three kinds of sub pixels for the three vital colors – red, green, and blue. Simply set, each kind of sub pixel absorbs two of the colors actually light are of different wavelengths and lets the third one go throughout. This is how colors are created.
The crisis is a lot as the backlight it and then turned to heat, and thus it is wasted. To allocate more light through, Samsung added a “white” sub pixel to the collection, though an improved tenure would be “lucid”. This sub pixel doesn’t sop up light like the other three types and serves to increase intensity, especially when it comes to displaying the white backgrounds that are widespread on the Web.

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