OldFatGuy: It's rather funny that others are telling me what I am seeing with my own eyes. lol.
I've been on computers since the 1980's.. I've gone through probably 2 dozen monitors over the years.
And this is the best one ever. (so far).
Now you may look at it and disagree (and I think I pointed that out in the OP) but you're not going to tell me I'm not seeing what I'm seeing because I am. The clarity is amazing. The whites are really really white and the blacks are really black (some serious contrast here). And the colors? OMG. Simply beautiful.
And at 75Hz it's not near as good as others (I've seen some 1440p's with a 144Htz refresh rate... so this is half roughly). And you could go on and on about the shortcomings I'm sure.
But it's the best monitor I've ever seen. But i still can't recommend it to anyone because... well, this thread shows exactly why. Two people can look at the same exact thing and come to two different conclusions. And there is simply no way I could possibly know who out there might have tastes (or lack thereof if you prefer) like mine. So I can't and won't recommend it. I will however give this company (Crossover) kudos for making a monitor that I like. It's the best monitor purchase I've ever made.
Its not the best you've ever seen, im sure, "sharpness" isnt everything, and oftentimes it's at the cost of reproducing material. The best you've ever seen, in displays, means the most accurate. unless you've hardly ever seen many monitors, it's not so. i t may be the one you prefer the best., but i suggest it is not the best..
one my main monitors i run at 90hz,. its even smoother, for the past age, it's from like the year 2000, cost me 10 bucks i search for these things, and is way more accurate in many respects. but i have many monitors.
You might prefer to run your display though, at 72hz though when your running blu ray content, if your display can properly do that,. for the best "motion" because blue ray playback is 24p(23.976 frames per second), and then each real frame of 24hz will be displayed as one of three into 72hz, and be much closer
at 72hz, and be without MUCH jutter, because 72hz is an incremental of 24p, for some of the best blu ray source motion rendering outside of true 24hz refresh.. otherwise your doing a slight inaccuracy in motion.. and diservice to the materials,. if your display is competant it should do 72hz, also 75hz is not great for 30fps or 60fps sources, because it's not an incremental map like 30hz 60hz or 90hz refresh rates.. good for 24p films though @72.. and maybe "butttery smoothe" for you in games. i do 90 and find it's also very smoothe. sometimes i do 75hz and i find it's nice too. I think 144hz is a bit of an overkill, and that the greatest difference is from 60hz upto 75hz., after that there is a difference, but it's in diminishing returns the farther you go, the xbox 1 was doing 30frames per second i think, and same thing with playstation 4, so we got it good., over 60hz. I thikn 120hz is unfortunate, i think 90hz is a great place to be., after that t's alot of bits for more deminished returns., in orders of magnitude, if teh greatest difference is from say 30hz and up, per hz.
more monitors doesn't mean you have a good perspective,.
I have owned many as well. AH-IPS LED, pva, and the lot.
"
Yes indeed, OLED sucks. In addition to dying out, OLED also suffers from burn-in just like Plasma TV's did (which is why they are now extinct).
OLED will be extinct in a few years too. It will be killed by self-emitting QLED which looks as good or better than OLED yet does not have OLED's defects.
"
Yes i agree oleds presently seem to suck for image retention/burn in. however, to counter the plasma arguments, final generation plasmas were much better then even 2010 panels for image retention, and significantly better than before that, and is for many people is basically not extant, in my findings. I think the big killer for plasma was more profitable LED marketting (terrible displays), and the potential sale of OLEDS and QLEDS. Basically, no matter how good plasma was or could be, there were MUCH higher profits for manufacturers elsewhere, pending i suggest a completely uninformed and tastless consumer majority. Basically, why sell a display you can profit 50 dollar from at a sale price of 400 dollars, when you can profit 350 from selling another display at the same price (LCD panels cost like 15 bucks.)?
I know, i have extensive exercise with samsung 2014 plasmas and Panasonic 2010's plasma's, I witnesses a BIG difference in retention/burn, at least in early panel life, and not even seeing it with the 2014 panel witht he same (not dissimilar) materials. but i didn't do HEAVY gaming on either. And the 2010 my experience thus far had been limited to early life of the panel... i never seen how rentention was mid-life, say at 25,000 hours., if the retention were less then.., and likely so i suggest, especially if materials changed. like if displaying a variety of games, over 25,000 hours, rather then only one, lol, then it might actually have proved to be a non issue for me, there as well. however never got to see that yet.
and there is a half life to image retention, or rather sub-pixel wear, where retention issues might be lost or diminished greatly, i suspect. with both plasma and oled. that is, when all sub pixels meet a middle wear zone of time, say between 10,000 hours and 50,000 hours, retention might not be such an issue as when the displays are new, when all sub pxiels have accrued many thousands of hours, Afterall., its hard to say with oleds, since most ppl probably don't have 16,000 hours on their panels yet... so those reports are of all of display infancy in use, at least mainly so...
But; I mean oleds are great at displaying the content, i didn`t mean they are a great display solution overall, and wouldn't necessarily recommend the hdtv's, which are ABL limited, for anyone owning some other older display solutions, in certain circumstances... and wont recommend them for the wear.. i was simply meaning in terms of accurate reproduction, and spectacular reproduction of game materials. The one in the s8 is probably the best, and is leagues beyond this "best display", in terms of picture quality (accuracy),, it can do, i think, a fullfield white of 1000nits, way more reference than any oled HDTV capped at 126nits(fullfield), and way better pixel control than a FALD QLED solution.. 1 pixel can be pure white, 1000nits, the next one off, and then one beside it a shade of gray out of 1024, all completely unaffected in reproduction by their adjacent pixels, So a spectacular representation of game materials, even in 0.00-100 nits, for rec.709, So i was wanting to make that point, of available visual reproduction.. that there are measures and existing solutions which are by definition waaay better for displaying particular game contents. that is; if the best display in industry is the most accurate..
Self emiting qled., thats a tossup, sony already did that, but they wont release it at the "consumer level". The thing is there too, wleds, and qleds sub pixels will probably, i suggest, become more blue over time, like a non-qled led,.. and result in color imbalances between pixels within the sub pixels which are worn, so you take two red sub pixels and they will look very different depending where on the panel they are and the life of that subpixel LED, i suspect to be an issue at least for early adopters, when the time comes, based on the issues of leds. I also predicted OLED HDTV wear, based on OLEDs, long before reports came out, frmo what i seen in embedded displays, which has proven to be an issue., So in the case of self emitting LED pixels, im concerned some pixels or subpixels will be more blue, or dimmer, or eratic in spectrum, or just different, than others displaying the same value, in reproduction, for reference conditions, and led light has spectrum issues too, in harsh peaks, im concerned might be in displays as well, offering false gamut, and not mitigated enough by QLED, (3m's QDEF). It's a shame about oled's in consumer hdtv's and the retention/wear issues. But again, that might be self defeating in mid-life. i havn't seen real indepth reports with recent panels with lots of use, say over 15,000 hours. WOLED though, are very blue white, almost as bad as some LED LCD displays..
Plasmas phosphors were rated for 100,000 hours before they are at 80 percent brightness, i think it is. Theres alot of midlife, most wont make it out of infancy i'm sure.