Some backgrounds appear transparent or blurred by default. You can make these transparent backgrounds opaque by giving them a solid color. In this way you simplify those parts of your screen and make them easier to see.
iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Plus will be available in five stunning new colors: pink, yellow, green, blue, and black. Pre-orders begin Friday, September 15, with availability beginning Friday, September 22.
Both models feature the second-generation Ultra Wideband chip, enabling two iPhone devices with this chip to connect at three times the range as before. This opens up a new way to use Precision Finding for Find My friends, so iPhone 15 users can share their location and find each other, even in crowds. Precision Finding is built with the same privacy protections that users have come to trust in Find My.8
iPhone 15 models continue to deliver a high-quality, superfast 5G experience9 and improved audio quality on phone calls, including those made on FaceTime or third-party apps. Sound quality gets even better when users select Voice Isolation to come through loud and clear, even if they are somewhere noisy.
iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Plus have eSIM, a more convenient and secure alternative to a physical SIM card, with support from more than 295 carriers. When traveling the world, users can stay connected through affordable international roaming plans from their existing carrier, or purchase prepaid eSIM plans in over 50 countries and regions, including Australia, Italy, Thailand, and more.
iOS 17 delivers many more updates, including Journal,11 a new app that helps iPhone users reflect and practice gratitude through journaling; improvements to autocorrect and Dictation; greater protection for Private Browsing in Safari; password and passkey sharing with iCloud Keychain; pet recognition in Photos; and much more.
To further reduce impact on the planet, Apple will no longer use leather in any new Apple products, including iPhone accessories. Apple is introducing a new FineWoven Case with MagSafe and FineWoven Wallet with MagSafe, made from a durable and elegant microtwill with a soft, suedelike feel. The material is made from 68 percent post-consumer recycled content and has significantly lower carbon emissions compared to leather.
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I've been living life in shades of gray. I read my email in gray, skim Facebook in gray, Slack in gray, watch Hulu at the gym in gray, pick playlists on Spotify in gray, snap photos in gray and even send calls and write texts in gray.
After watching this Atlantic video (dubbed "To Break a Phone Addiction, Turn Your Screen Gray") about a #lifehack to cut down device time by putting your phone screen into grayscale, I was ready to try it out.
So I did. For the month of May everything was gray. Part of the Atlantic's editor's rationale for grayscale was that it washed out the urgency of red notifications and the allure of colorful pictures on apps like Facebook and Instagram.
But I found myself using my phone mostly the same. I wish I could say I cut back on compulsively checking my email, but it turns out there's not much color to begin with in email. The biggest impact the color deprivation may have had was on social media pages heavy on visuals. I found myself gravitating to text posts instead of the cat snapshots and wedding pictures. I noticed I was quicker than usual to sign out of Facebook. Because endless gray gets monotonous fast.
I noticed I quickly found loopholes to bring digital color back into my life. I'd take a photo and post it on Twitter almost immediately, then open my laptop to see it in its vivid glory. I'd sneak many peaks at my boyfriend's phone to watch videos or browse the web. My work computer seemed so much brighter and prettier than it had before. This would have been a true experience if every digital device had been switched to gray. That'll have to be next time.
Overall, I'm glad I tried this out. After the first day I arrived at the gym and had completely forgotten that watching the latest Silicon Valley episode wasn't going to be the same. But I made myself stick with it and for 31 days I managed to never revert to color -- not even a glimpse.
I checked it on my Samsung Galaxy S3 and S4 and the same thing. On my son's iPhone, its accurate. On two laptops its accurate. I even took a screen shot of my laptop and emailed it to myself, then checked it on my phone....same thing. Then I used my camera on my phone and pointed it to my laptop screen...same thing....neon. So I'm thinking its either all Androids (because I have no other android device besides Samsungs) or its just Samsung phones.
Here is a link to the image. View it on your phone and on the laptop and tell me what you think on how I could fix this. I know I'm developing for Android so maybe I need to adjust the color specifically for android. But if anyone has something other than Samsung and let me know how it displays vs the laptop I'd really appreciate any input.
So essentially that is what it looks like on my phone, but with a touch of blue to it, but this displays the "neon" brightness that I'm seeing.....but I'm happy with the way it looks in the laptop, however, maybe I should use a different color for the android application that more mimics what I see on the laptop, especially since its an android app :)
Basically, instead of each pixel getting a red, green, and blue subpixel that are the same size, a PenTile pixel gets red and green or blue and green subpixels. The red and blue are larger than the green to balance the brightness.
For example, my iMac displays the green image differently to the external monitor (EIZO) attached to it. That doesn't make any colour "right" or "wrong" - it's all down to the monitor's reproduction.
So yes, the images are different. My Sony Xperia (Android) shows a different colour to my MacBook Pro (although certainly not Neon). Slightly more yellow, as noted above. But it's not just Android - it's everything.
P.S. I've never heard - or noticed - Samsung's displaying a "weird" green, so maybe it's just this exact shade? Samsung will have written drivers for their display (and colour profiles) so it could totally be a real issue with this colour that causes this problem.
I am a designer usually i send my designs to the customers by WhatsApp Web. The main problem occured while seeing the design on phone colors are very different green looks light green, Blue looks cyan. I tried to send my Jpeg images after convert to RGB. That worked. Colours are perfect. Smart Phone displays only RGB colours perfect. Not CMYK.
The difference is in screen technology. Laptops use TN or IPS. Apple uses IPS. Phones use TN, IPS or (am)oled. By pretty mych every measure exept cost, TN is the worst. IPS is a bit more costly but pretty great quality.
The Samsung Galaxy S3 uses amoled, which is an odd beast. It doesn't use a acklight and 'shutters' in front of it, but it actually lights up each (sub)pixel individually. This means it has excellent blacks, since there isn't any of the backlight seeping through the 'shutter'. It also makes them thinner and more power efficient - pretty sweet benefits for a pocketable device.
But oleds are organic matter (that's what the 'o' means) and tend to deteriorate faster than traditional screens. [note: maybe current generation stuff has been fixed?] So you'll get weird colors. For example:The discolored left bar shows a ghost image of the onscreen buttons, which are on a black background. As the black background means those pixels are off, they don't wear down while the rest of the screen does. So over time, the rest of the screen darkens, but this doesn't.
Oleds also have the capacity to have much stronger/saturated colors than a regular screen. Which sounds nice, it can show a wider gamut, but in reality it means that normal colors ger pumped and become garisch colors. This can be fixed with good calibration, but most manufacturers don't because these colors make the screens pop:
Also. Nathan Rabe mentioned pentile grids. These shouldn't really influence the color, not on a large area like this anyway. It's more of an issue with details and edge sharpness. Perhaps if you used a checkerboard of 1x1 pixels, too, but that's a very niche case. For large areas it doesn't matter much.
Imagine if I give you an apple, banana, orange for food. Or an apple, an apple and a orange one day and banana banana orange the next. For one day week matters. For a week, still. You'd get 8 apples, 6 bananas and 7 oranges. A bit off balance. But over a whole year? 366 apples, 364 bananas, 365 oranges. STILL a bit off, but not enough to make a significant difference.
Calibrate your phone, if possible. My phone, a Huawei Ascend P1, has a setting in the display menu that is toggled on by default. It pumps the colors. You don't want that. If you can find something similar on your Samsung, disable it. It might not fix the issue entirely, but it'll alleviate it. Obviously this only works on YOUR phone though, so everyone else using the site still sees the garish color.
as you can see from the photos mine is the one on the left and you can already see some differences. in addition I repeat the colors are less vivid, less bright I do not know how to explain. I'm not talking about yellow
Una cosa la resa dello schermo in generale che potrebbe presentare una tonalit non gradita/corretta. Qualsiasi cosa visualizzata (la app della fotocamera, il browser, una foto in un altra app, ecc...) verrebbe mostrata "virata". Indipendentemente dall'app di utilizzo.
Un altra cosa la fotocamera. Anch'essa potrebbe generare immagini virate a causa del sensore che acquisisce l'immagine proveniente dall'obiettivo virato di tono. In questo caso solo le foto scattate da quel sensore risulterebbero con colori meno saturi o altri difetti. Il resto risulterebbe corretto.
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