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Een vertaalprobleem melden
sports scoreboard or game hud will be most likely to burn faster
since they are static image and not moving
they looked up the issue and it seems it's pretty widespread. honestly I wouldn't touch lg even if they were to gift me their products.
I play many of my PC and console games via my LG C2 OLED, but only play games and watch TV and movies on it. Normal web browsing is left to my IPS monitor.
the fact that you or the monitors have to do this is concerning and pretty much says it all.
To what are you referring to when you say 'mine'?
doesn't seem like a very friendly thing to do, "friend".
All lights fade with use. If one light is used more than another, it will fade faster. Since each pixel is its own light in OLED, it's impossible for them to wear out evenly.
IPS lights also fade, but because the lights are used equally, they fade in a fairly uniform way. Even so, IPS screens degrade in their own way, and at fairly similar time scales as OLED. Rtings.com has an ongoing longevity test for IPS and OLED panels. There are casualties on both sides.
I've never had a phone OLED show signs of burn in, so I decided to get the new 240hz 4k Alienware.
Even when ( not if) you do get burn in, it may not be noticeable for a long time. By then, you'll likely want to upgrade it anyways.
We spend $40k on vehicles we know barely last 5 years on average. We shouldn't expect a $1000 monitor to last much longer than that.
If you want the best picture, OLED is the one true way. The tech continues to get better, but accept that it won't last 10+ years. It also comes with some maintenance overhead. That's the price you pay for it's unrivaled quality .
That shouldn't matter though. If you upgrade your PC every 3 to 5 years, but not your monitor , what was the point ? Your monitor is a bottleneck in your system same as your GPU and CPU. Expect to upgrade it on a similar cycle if you want to get the benefit of your current gen PC hardware. No point in having an rtx 4xxx if you're using a monitor from the mid 2000's.
Whoa. Let me stop you right there, friend. Maybe if you're building a low-end PC, you might expect it to wear out within that time frame. I like to build one high-end system that lasts at least 10 years. And lasts well, indeed, friend.
Know your use case. If you only play one game all the time with static HUDs, then your chance of getting it is very high.