By John Gruber
WorkOS: APIs to ship SSO, SCIM, FGA, and User Management in minutes. Check out their launch week.
Rasmus Larsen, writing for FlatpanelsHD:
Reviewers, calibrators and certification bodies typically use a 10% window for HDR testing, which simply means that it takes up 10% of the screen. In this window multiple steps from black to white as well as a set of colors are measured. Samsung has designed its TVs to recognize this and other commonly used window sizes, after which the TV adjusts its picture output to make measurements appear more accurate than the picture really is. When using a non-standard window such as 9% (everything else equal), the cheating algorithm can be bypassed so the TV reveals its true colors.
This is deliberate cheating, an orchestrated effort to mislead reviewers.
Vincent Teoh of HDTVTest first identified and documented the issue on Samsung’s S95B QD-OLED TV. FlatpanelsHD has since identified and documented the issue on Samsung’s QN95B ‘Neo QLED’ LCD TV where it gets even worse.
Shocker.
★ Monday, 13 June 2022