The text was originally published on the blog Forum Spider’s Web.
As we know practically every year there are new devices of the highest quality from companies like Samsung, LG, Huawei, Sony. In theory, each new model is better than its predecessor. Each manufacturer is trying to not make the same mistakes. Unfortunately, not always successful.
For example, we have the Samsung Galaxy S6 edge and the problem, which appeared almost after 2 months of use. As we know, the AMOLED screens burn out. In smartphones, Samsung screens AMOLED this problem occurred and continues to occur, but never met with it to appear so quickly after such a short period of use.
The problem I present the following picture:
As you can see they are burned icons navigation. A person who is the problem appeared smartphone uses quite extensively – mainly conversation, e-mail, and partly for navigation. Navigation uses the same about 1.5-2 hours a day with breaks. Mainly communication on our capital, and from time to time a longer route. The screen backlight usually set at a high level.
Even using the maximum backlight problem should not arise. After all, this is the maximum brightness is determined by the manufacturer, who “certainly” screen tested for such an eventuality.
The tests everywhere emphasized the high brightness of the Samsung Galaxy S6 edge. Only nobody wrote that this “high brightness” will burn – icons, belts notifications or other interface elements – on the screen.
Are these problems unbecoming flagowcom?
Remember that flagship is always top-notch equipment. The price is also quite high. So we pay for quality at a high level. That’s why I’m surprised that after such a short time, burned icons on the screen.
Note that in the usual “navigation systems”, which we use, the screen is not top-flight – you can say that even medium is not – and the problem practically does not exist, and certainly not after such a short period of use.
Questions arise: Is it isolated cases? As will appear on the screen after 2 years, when he finishes a guarantee?
The text was originally published on the blog Forum Spider’s Web.
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