That's really cool.
It's interesting to see the pixels up close like this, and I like that you can actually see how much more black the old screen has than the new one.
via Engadget
You know those complaints about the ugly, old-school looking interlacing lines that many (ourselves included) have reported seeing on the new PSP-3000? The specific issue has been uncovered -- but not by Sony. A group of concerned French gamers with a 40x microscope think it all comes down to that most mellow of colors: blue. LCDs are comprised of RGB pixels that, combined, form all the rainbow of hues in between.
As you can see in the picture above, the PSP-2000's LCD (left) used pixels in a vertical orientation, and the blue pixels were fairly light in color. On the PSP-3000 (right), the pixels are now arranged horizontally, and the blue ones are far darker than before. The dark horizontal lines result in the heinous interlacing, an effect that any Command & Conquer player will tell you wasn't even cool in the 90's. Sony's already called this a "feature" and not a flaw, so if you absolutely must buy a PSP this holiday season the folks at Logic-Sunrise who took the above pics recommend you buy an older 2000-series -- while you still can.
That's really cool.
It's interesting to see the pixels up close like this, and I like that you can actually see how much more black the old screen has than the new one.
idiots.
Seems noone here knows anything about anything related to LCD's, screens, displays and pixels/sub-pixels.
so their gonna do nothing about it
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