Developers in Samsung had to review all the existing development process and decided to start from the beginning. For the creation of the WQHD smartphone, the planning and manufacturing process as well as the equipments was newly developed. As we discussed, the WQHD offers the highest resolution for the smartphone at present.
In addition, Samsung was able to maintain relatively lower power consumption with new elements, mainly by making the most out of the advantages of the AMOLED display. What will be the next step? How will the smartphone display evolve further in the future? After that, the display will be developed into flexible display or transparent display which will enable us to use the smart devices in a wider range of environments in more various way.
For now, it seems that we first have to wait for the WQHD to be standard on smartphone displays. With superior display panel combined with unique software technology, Samsung is ready for next steps so that the display is easy on your eyes and smarter than ever. For any issues related to customer service, please go to Customer Support page for assistance. For media inquiries, please click Media Contact to move to the form.
This display resolution is common on Smart TVs and many modern smartphones, PCs, laptops and monitors. Both HD resolutions here use a aspect ratio so there are 16 pixels horizontally for each 9 vertically , which can be described as widescreen.
However, on a phone 1, x becomes x 1, when it's held normally. For instance, a Full HD smartphone has far more detail sharpness , usually described as pixels-per-inch ppi than a Full HD monitor because the smaller screen is a higher density but has the same number of pixels, so a sharper picture.
In the smartphone revolution of the last five or so years, manufacturers have been desperate to put higher resolution screens into phones even where they are not needed. It's often argued that resolutions above that of Full HD are wasted on such comparatively small panels as even people with perfect vision find it hard to spot any difference. Nevertheless, phone makers have done it anyway, probably for marketing purposes.
QHD is four times the definition of standard p HD, meaning you can fit the same number of pixels as four HD displays into a QHD display of the same size, namely 2, x 1, pixels, or p. But most of the time the 2K name is derived from the larger of the pixel measurements being over 2, pixels. QHD could even be referred to as 2. Despite having a very similar name, qHD stands for Quarter High Definition and is a display resolution of x pixels - one-quarter of p Full HD. This is used much less frequently these days.
In the early days of HD television you would see references to both i interlaced and p progressive - the interlaced technology was a throwback to the TV sets of old, where one frame would show the even lines of the picture and the next frame would show the odd lines, effectively halving the number of frames. These days you'll almost exclusively see p mentioned, if the "i" or "p" are included at all if no letter is shown, it's very probably p.
Display resolutions didn't stick at Full HD for long, and the next step up the ladder was Quad High Definition, or QHD - 2, by 1, pixels, the standard for many a flagship phone right now. A lot of phones still make use of Full HD though, and whether you can tell the difference on a 5 or 6 inch screen is debatable; that said, it certainly looks better on a specs sheet, which may be why many phone manufacturers have gone for it.
Then there's 2K, which is rather erratically applied across the industry, but technically speaking can refer to any display where the larger dimension measures more than 2, pixels so 2, x 1, for example. However, WQHD and QHD are also often labelled as 2K as well, because they are half the height and half the width of 4K, so you've got three different terms for the same display resolution. Some people like to keep the distinction between 4K and UHD clear, but the term 4K is now used so frequently for gaming consoles and TVs that everyone uses it as shorthand for the 3, x 2, resolution.
Many hardware makers put a 4K UHD label on their goods just to cover all their bases, while technically speaking p could also be used to mean both types of 4K and UHD. There are so many pixels in 4K - more than 8 million - that there's not much point in packing them into a smartphone display though some have tried. You're much more likely to see this resolution on big screen monitors and television sets.
0コメント