So, my HP Omen laptop (which looking back, I regret purchasing) has two things:
One, it has the offer to upgrade to Windows 10, where my desktop does not.
Two, its audio doesn't appear to be working. Yay. I've barely used the fucking thing.
Nope.
It looks in the sound control panel that Windows isn't even picking up the audio... yet I'm playing something, such as via YouTube that I know has audio. -.-
Bork bork?
Also interesting read from a dev at oxide.
http://www.overclock.net/t/1569897/v...#post_24356995
Seems like trying to run Asynch Compute stuff is disastrous for current nvidia gpu =\
Different panel technologies normally have different looking pixels. Some VAs are also very strange. I mean, really strange.
Example of IPS.
LG has a RGBW sub-pixel scheme at their current OLEDs, with a "white" sub-pixel to help alleviate blue faster degradation. This is long known but that's the first time I saw someone actually posting a picture of it, I think that's their current flagship at the picture. I wouldn't have guessed that their sizes and formats were this much different from each other, the white one is so... round.
This is how current OLEDs look at phones, which are way smaller.
hehe understandable.
I think I have 50~ open right now. :P
And yeah, the IPS picture looks familiar, pretty sure Remilia has shown it to me before.
First VA picture is from his monitor =p
Plasma's miniature fluorescent lamps are cuter.
RGBW is weird as hell. That W is also extremely bloated. O.o
If you want the most boring sub pixel lay out, just look at TN >.>
http://img1.lesnumeriques.com/article/1547/dalle-tn.jpg
The subpixel lay out is pretty much 100% reason why each panel is different. Otherwise they're all just blobs of liquid crystals. It's also why one is more expensive to manufacture than another.
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Random thought occured... how does one write "Nvidia".
I see
Nvidia
NVidia
nVidia
nVIDIA
NVIDIA
D: