Color gamuts are technology. Post color gamuts

Color gamuts are technology. Post color gamuts.

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I can plot those too.

Rec 2020 capable OLED consumer monitor when

ca 2021

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does oled increase color gamut? Is OLED worth it?

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Not by itself, but due to the nature of the tech it's easier to achieve a larger gamut. It doesn't just magically happen though.

Not the user you're replying to, but isn't that only because there's no backlight to muddy up individual component colors?

Also I don't get the hype behind OLED, the power consumption is at least 2 times higher than conventional LED, so higher luminance levels are even more expensive to reach. Increasing luminance also helps to increase gamut, so I don't get what the fuck are tv manufacturers doing having these sketchy tradeofs.

same

so how much better is crt compared to lcd when it comes to colour reproduction? this is one of the things I hear get brought up often enough when people talk about them

Don't care if they're displayed on shitty screens.

CRT is good primarily because of the black levels. Viewed in a dark room black with actually be black instead of some shade of gray.
sRGB is a straightforward representation of CRT gamut and while cheap ass LCDs always struggled to reach it, any more serious displays go beyond that easily.
CRTs always sucked at brightness, brighter displays means more power consumption and CRTs already waste quite a lot.

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CRT color reproduction is entirely a meme, decent IPS panels blow them out of the water

CRTs have much better linearity than most LCDs so even an average CRT is relatively easy to calibrate almost perfectly whereas calibrating your typical "universal" LCD (with R/G/B linear characteristics each fucked up in its own way) is basically impossible. LCDs also have problems with backlight uniformity, backlight bleeding, silvering, viewing angles, shit black point etc., all of which influence color perception.

No, I don't advocate using CRTs in $current_year, but CRTs *are* better for color-critical work than most LCDs. Obviously, there are high-end "graphical" LCDs from Eizo or NEC out there with things like 16-bit writeable LUT for hardware calibration, GBr backlights and a fuckton of electronics to mitigate the problems I mentioned, but they cost an arm and a leg, so they only make sense if you work in pre-press or other color-critical field, or are extremely autistic.

>infinite contrast ratio
>"I don't get the hype"
gtfo luddite

>not getting amoled screens