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Screen Size
Seeing this next to an iphone still makes the screen look tiny. I wish they would have come out with a windows phone that had a large display like the iphone. Still, I'll most likely be getting a touch pro when it comes out.
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Re: Screen Size
screen resolutions are different. touch pro has 640x480, iphone has the 320x240 i believe.
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Lawl @ iPhone having 320x240!
320x480 I believe. Its widescreen after all! |
Re: Screen Size
Yes it [iPhone] has a 480x320 resolution but it's also the fact that the screen supports 16 Million colors vs. 65,000 on every WM device and it's made of glass not plastic (increases clarity, better brightness).
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Re: Screen Size
The human eye can't even distinguish such high color counts, and the high count just increases RAM usage anyway, so I don't know why some are so concerned about it.
In any case, would be nice to have a 3.x" screen (I'm thinking 3.2" like the Zune would be great), but I'm not too greedy about it as long as the screen it has is clear and easy to see and as long as text isn't microscopic. |
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Humm, well here I am thinking about a Sony Cliq. That thing was small, but man oh man I could catch the clarity of that screen from a far.. The resolution was awesome.
I am hoping, (and by the looks of the pictures posted of the screen, I can already tell, it's almost like black print on white paper.) the screen resolution will look at least as decent. Also as a comparison, take an HTC with the standard 240x320 screen size and compare it to let's say some slider Nokia's screen.. You seen text and web browsing on that "smaller" screen? I can say imho it's clearer, more visibly readable.. Now I hope the on screen keyboard matches the resolution and doesn't hog up the viewable area.. Quite annoying not being able to see what you're typing. My 2c -CC |
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http://ask.yahoo.com/20041227.html Dear Yahoo!: How many colors can the human eye perceive? Shelby Seattle, Washington Dear Shelby: Color is how our eyes and brain interpret light. Our eyes can only see radiation with a wavelength of 380 nanometers to 740 nanometers. This is called the visible spectrum of light. Sir Issac Newton listed the pure spectral colors we see in light as red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. But "Roy G. Biv" isn't the only name in town when it comes to what colors exist. In 1790, researcher Thomas Young said the human eye sees only three colors -- red, blue, and yellow -- and every other color was just a combination of these primary colors. In 1878 Ewald Hering posited a theory of four unique hues of red, green, yellow, and blue, which, when mixed with white or black, represent all the possible colors humans can process. Useful knowledge for painters and printers perhaps, but it doesn't quite answer your question. The problem is that nobody really knows exactly how many colors the human eye can see. The closest researchers can estimate is millions and millions. Scientific experiments have shown that humans can discriminate between very subtle differences in color, and estimates of the number of colors we can see range as high as 10 million. Of course, every person's eyes perceive color a bit differently, and every culture has its own names for colors so coming up with an exact number may not be possible. A different answers; http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_many_c...an_eye_can_see http://hypertextbook.com/facts/2006/JenniferLeong.shtml |
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Almost everything we have printed on paper, even from your computers printer, is "4 color printing"
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