After all is bright, responsive, and resolution that far surpasses that of the iPhone. But there are other factors that make a good screen. Below a list to get a basic idea:

  • The Nexus One has a green sub-pixels for each pixel, but uses an algorithm to “share” sub red and blue pixels when needed. Most often this can help to increase the brightness and help with the density of pixels, but the author will lead to gray scale.
  • Second test, Nexus One uses only 16-bit color, the color type that was on your PC around 1998, with 32 levels each of red and blue, and 64 for green. The iPhone however, (such as LCDs quality) has 18-bit dithering, enabling him to emulate 24-bit full color, if not you look too closely. The table above illustrates the nuances of color uniform the counting of bits produced on the iPhone, where the Nexus One suffers from banding. The depth of color in a picture is a very important factor.
  • The display of the iPhone is considerably brighter, even if the contrast is really worse. This is due to the nature of the OLED Nexus One, which enables truly blacks blacks. Could end up in the playoff challenge, but the iPhone wins by default because a higher luminosity in the smartphone market also means better visibility in many areas.

More >