The TCL 40 NXTPAPER and the TCL 40 NXTPAPER 5G become the world’s first and only smartphone devices to offer a revolutionary full color paper-like visual experience.
Again TCL misrepresenting their NXTPaper display.
At least they've stopped actually calling it "full colour epaper" which was an outright lie and moved to "paper-like" which is wrong but legally they can get away with that.
These are IPS LCDs, with standard backlighting. they have a highly matte surface and a semi-reflective layer for improved daylight viewing. they are not E-ink or E-Paper or any of those fully reflective technologies.
as far as I can tell, but since they don't actually say that it's either due to a patent on transflective tech (transflexive some branded it) or because it doesnt do as much as that technology did, from the examples i've seen of the larger tablets being used in the sun it doesn't look anywhere near as bright and clear as a good E-ink tablet like a Boox, but in low light or night it looks better but the power usage is significantly higher.
Don't know but I always liked them as an all rounder device. I think they are still using a last gen colour tech, but there are dual screen phones with lcd on one side and epaper on the other that are a nifty middle ground.
I don't think colour eink is quite there though. The kaleido tech has enough speed to be usable, but poor colour and much greyer whites than carta greyscale due to the colour being a translucent pigment layer over the top of a greyscale screen. Eink gallery could be used but currently is much slower to do a full colour draw, too slow for a phone or tablet. Eink spectra 6 looks incredible but is also too slow for anything but signage.
There was one group showing off a prototype transparent OLED layer over a greyscale eink backing which sounds like the best of all worlds, so we will see what that amounts to.
Thanks for the clarification! I think there is still some merit to a more paperlike display, I wish Google kept Ambient EQ beyond the Pixel 4 because it's quite nice on iPhones
The NXTpaper displays are standard LCDs with a highly matte coating and some processing and colour rendering modes to simulate paper, I think they have some transflexive film to make them more sunlight viewable, but still have a backlight.
They are not e-paper, or e-ink, nor are they a fully reflective display.
Idk, seems like just another frosted glass display, seems to me like it'll just hurt outside visibility, also it's permanently a blue light filter? No thanks
my favorite feature of the nook (was it the nook?) was the e-ink screen and how vastly superior it was for reading. I'm not sure the science behind it (because I read an article on here once that blue light doesn't actually affect much) but I can't read for long periods on an led screen, it hurts my eyes and it's harder for me to focus
no, this is just a more sunlight readable backlit LCD with some colour filtering and processing to appear more paper like.
it requires constant power unlike e-ink and the only way they can claim it saves power is because it requires less backlight brightness to be sunlight viewable.
I haven't spent much time with the color ones but my understanding is that the display has a slow response time and some ghosting, much like its B&W counterparts. I'll be interested to see how this phone works with typical smartphone workloads, like live scrolling.
Inside me, there are two wolves. One wants 120+hz refresh rates. The other wants e-ink.
Edit: I see on their specs page they list a 90hz refresh rate. I'm not entirely clear what kind of tech is in here. Perhaps one layer is a traditional LCD with matte coating?