Επίσης μια συμβουλή για να απολαύσετε καλύτερα την οθόνη...
At peak brightness, the new iPad’s renditions of photos and videos look extremely similar to Apple’s high-resolution iMac and Thunderbolt Displays, with noticeably richer—and generally more accurate—colors than prior iPads. However, not all new iPad screens are created exactly equal, as shown in the picture below. Some models ship with a screen that tends to emphasize yellows, improving everything except for skin tones, while others are more neutrally balanced, variations we’ve seen in past iPod touches and iPhones due to different screen producers. As in the past, there’s no way to know which screen a given unit will come with, and no way to calibrate the color balance to personal preferences. Each screen has roughly the same top brightness level as the iPad 2.
It should be mentioned that the improved color saturation is far less noticeable when the new iPad and earlier iPads are set at 50% of their brightness, the level that Apple traditionally uses for testing of iPad batteries, and the one we’ve kept our iPads at in the past. At that level, the differences in vibrance become subtle.
If you want to get the most out of the new iPad’s screen for photo editing, you’ll want to turn it up to 85% or higher brightness, and suffer increased battery drain as a result.
με λίγα λόγια ανεβάζοντας την φωτεινότητα περίπου στο 85% έχουμε καλύτερο αποτέλεσμα. Ενδιαφέρον πάντως έχουν και τα σχόλια προφανώς η οθόνη "τα σπάει"
http://www.ilounge.c...gb-32gb-64gb/P2Πηγή το ilounge που γενικά είναι ψύχραιμοι αναλυτές και δεν λένε βλακείες...
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