I am thinking of getting an MHL cable and Bluetooth keyboard/mouse sets.... but the 800X480 is a bit low for a casual PC.
On the other hand anyone tried LCD resolution to increase the resolution of SII and then MHL?
Not sure how useful it would be.... but definitely good fun
You can change the lcd density(not the resolution) from the default value of 240 to some lower value to get higher resolution like screen. Not sure about how the display will be when using mhl cable + this tweak.
Yeah... I imagine that MHL would just mirror the LCD screen unless it's playing a video... So......
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guys would it be possible to take off the screens in each tablet and install the nexus 10 screen on the note 10.1 ?? Wouldnt that give us the resolution capabilities for it , and at the same time replace the battery and get the NFC ??
cubandevil said:
guys would it be possible to take off the screens in each tablet and install the nexus 10 screen on the note 10.1 ?? Wouldnt that give us the resolution capabilities for it , and at the same time replace the battery and get the NFC ??
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The Note has an inductive display to support the S-Pen and the N10's display is capacitive and the pen won't work. So, pick one.
so the screens are not separated like a digitizer and the actual screen ?? and sorry for these question im ignorant when it comes to things like these.
Pretty sure the Exynos 4 that's inside the Note 10.1 doesn't support the Nexus 10's screen resolution. So it won't work as far as I know.
The screen wont work for mainly two reasons the wavecom chip wont work with a capacative screen and it does not support higher resolution then what we have on the note. That is why not has that resolution
The processor does not support that high resolution.
These are main two reason apart from many other. Its like fitting a trucks body on a cars chassies
cubandevil said:
so the screens are not separated like a digitizer and the actual screen ?? and sorry for these question im ignorant when it comes to things like these.
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Click to collapse
Here's the difference between the two displays. An inductive display picks up an electro-magnetic signal from the pen where a capacitive display only can respond to physical contact. Based on the manufacturing complexity I'd guess the Note's display cost Samsung more than the FHD+ display on the N10.
BarryH_GEG said:
Here's the difference between the two displays. An inductive display picks up an electro-magnetic signal from the pen where a capacitive display only can respond to physical contact. Based on the manufacturing complexity I'd guess the Note's display cost Samsung more than the FHD+ display on the N10.
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We have both capacitive and inductive digitizers as we have dual digitizers one from atmel and the other is wacom
Sent from my X10S using xda app-developers app
hoss_n2 said:
We have both capacitive and inductive digitizers as we have dual digitizers one from atmel and the other is wacom
Sent from my X10S using xda app-developers app
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Click to collapse
Thank you guys , just using my imagination
I didnt know that the screen resolution mattered to the cpu , but then again a computer monitor will go as far as the graphics in a pc allows it ..
Yes the same concept works over here, it depends on how much the mali gpu allows it go to. Secondly as the resolution increase the processing power requirement also increases.
You can have insane resolutions but how pratical are they since most of the apps are developed for a 5inch screen.
This was posted in the N10 forum and sort of describes the challenges of inking on a capacitive display by someone who tried to solve them. To me, either inking works well or why bother. Using a kluge might get the job done but would be very frustrating. I'd rather live with the 720P display (which is still better in contrast and brightness than the N10's).
transceiver said:
I made the app Writepad Stylus to do precisely that, on the Asus Transformer 101. Palm rejection on a capacitive screen, without weird zoning boxes. It worked pretty well and I made a lot of money from it. But there are a ton of issues with that algorithm that I ran into when I got the Asus Transformer Prime, which ultimately made me give up on the app:
Bad capacitive screen sensitivity. The Transformer Prime and the Galaxy Tab 10.1 both have awful sensitivity settings, so the writing comes out looking like an 8 year old's scribble. It doesn't register all the input points. It doesn't start recording points until AFTER you move the stylus a certain distance. Ugh. There's an app that sorta fixes that called TouchscreenTune, but it requires root, and the settings for that are really hard to calibrate. Even after messing with that, it's still not as good as on the Xoom or the original Transformer.
Touch screen can't handle straight lines. If you try to draw a straight line horizontally or vertically, it comes out straight. If you try to draw a diagonal line, it comes out wiggly. This is also particular to certain tablet screens. Who knows whether a particular tablet will have good touch screen or crappy one? No reviewer tests for that kind of thing. You have to go to the store to try it out.
Your hand will accidentally hit the notification or navigation buttons, taking focus away from the app, or accidentally going back to the homescreen. As far as I know, this can happen even with the S-pen. Asus has a "lock navigation bar" feature on their tablets, which is nice. There's no way to hide the navigation bar or disable it while something is going on in app (unless you root your tablet).
Anyway, if someone wants to test these things on the Nexus 10 and report back, I'd be grateful since I can't find these in stores yet. Just try to write as small as you can with a capacitive stylus, and try to slowly draw straight diagonal lines.
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BarryH_GEG said:
Here's the difference between the two displays. An inductive display picks up an electro-magnetic signal from the pen where a capacitive display only can respond to physical contact. Based on the manufacturing complexity I'd guess the Note's display cost Samsung more than the FHD+ display on the N10.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You have posted a comparison between a RESISTIVE display and a capacitive/inductive one. The top picture is resistive which is old technology now, it's what the old smart phones and pocket PC's used and had a thin layer of plasticky material for sensing pressure. The note 10.1 uses both capacitive (for fingers) and inductive (for the pen).....and the nexus 10 just uses capacitive, not the screen in the 1st pic in your diagram. As far as I know, no screens use resistive tech anymore.
Sent from my GT-N8010 using xda app-developers app
I've noticed when I connect the N10 to my LCD TV with native resolution of 1368x768 using a micro-HDMI to HDMI cable that the image doesn't stretch all the way to the edge of the display. Instead it leaves black bars on either side of probably 75-100 pixels. Does anyone else notice this?? Is there a setting I'm missing to be able to scale the display to fill the entire screen?
Doesn't fill my TV either, the issue, I guess is that it's mirroring so it won't change aspect, that may be different for videos but I haven't tried.
Sent from my GT-I9300 using Tapatalk 2
alfer said:
I've noticed when I connect the N10 to my LCD TV with native resolution of 1368x768 using a micro-HDMI to HDMI cable that the image doesn't stretch all the way to the edge of the display. Instead it leaves black bars on either side of probably 75-100 pixels. Does anyone else notice this?? Is there a setting I'm missing to be able to scale the display to fill the entire screen?
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Click to collapse
Only way to change the aspect ratio is through your TV. My 50in Philips LCD HD, has settings option to change the display view. Maybe in later firmware updates they may include HDMI options through the device.
Sent from my Nexus 10 using Tapatalk HD
Yep, its the aspect ratio. TVs have standardized on 16:9. Android phones and 7" tablets are also 16:9, but since 10" tablets are meant to be held in landscape Google's set the standard to be 16:10 so the soft keys dont take too much of the display away from actual content.
Put in laymans terms, the Nexus has more height per width than your TV, so it either must use black bars, stretch, or crop. Black bars look the best of those options.
Good to know its not just me or my HDMI cable. If this issue is important to you to get resolved, please check out this link and star the issue. With enough votes Google might provide us more options to scale the mirrored output or select a custom resolution in a future release of Android.
It fills your screen when you watch a Movie or TV show though right?
So it is definitely possible for the Nexus to send the signal.
I'm looking for a frameless touchscreen with lcd or oled technology, 50pin 12c spi connector , size between 7" and 10" and if the resolution is full hd that would be the best. I searched in the web but i not really find something. i also search for LG, Samsung display manufactur but it's hard to find something like that i search. I hope you can help me.
I bought an lg g2 a couple of weeks ago and the first day it was faulty every time you pushed on the casing around the charge port the screen would flicker on and off and the screen would not display while charging. I have gotten the phone back after returning it to be repaired and went through cpu-z and it says my resolution is 1080 x 1776 but it should be 1080 x 1920 right? Have they given me a lower res screen or do i need to set the resolution somehow (phone hasn't been rooted), im assuming it should default to the native resolution of the screen though?
sephy12 said:
I bought an lg g2 a couple of weeks ago and the first day it was faulty every time you pushed on the casing around the charge port the screen would flicker on and off and the screen would not display while charging. I have gotten the phone back after returning it to be repaired and went through cpu-z and it says my resolution is 1080 x 1776 but it should be 1080 x 1920 right? Have they given me a lower res screen or do i need to set the resolution somehow (phone hasn't been rooted), im assuming it should default to the native resolution of the screen though?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is the resolution without the software buttons, Only area usable by the apps, most apps/games report this resolution. If you do screenshot( hold power button+vol.down) and check the resoluton of the picture you'll see that the actual screen resolution is indeed 1080x1920
yonef said:
This is the resolution without the software buttons, Only area usable by the apps, most apps/games report this resolution. If you do screenshot( hold power button+vol.down) and check the resoluton of the picture you'll see that the actual screen resolution is indeed 1080x1920
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ahh right, that makes sense. Cheers for clearing that up
I am looking to buy this phone to use with Gear VR. Apparently RGB Amoled displays show less Screen Door Effect (SDE) than Diamond pentile Amoled displays.
Researching the net, some results say it has an RGB display and some say Pentile display. You owners will know for sure so which display tech does it have please?
Also anyone use this phone with the Gear VR headset? Much SDE?
I am pretty sure its is RGB
Pentile, like every samsung amoled displays
tboy2000 said:
I am looking to buy this phone to use with Gear VR. Apparently RGB Amoled displays show less Screen Door Effect (SDE) than Diamond pentile Amoled displays.
Researching the net, some results say it has an RGB display and some say Pentile display. You owners will know for sure so which display tech does it have please?
Also anyone use this phone with the Gear VR headset? Much SDE?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I use the Gear VR a lot. It's not really noticeable unless you get something of poor quality, then it does become bad especially in bright parts. Games like Dread halls is not noticeable at all for me.