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masseyzac t1_j1o7dfr wrote

Burn in only happens when a static image is displayed for an extended period of time. I would hope you’re not staring at the same exact pr0n image for hours straight, but no kink shame here

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sneikboi t1_j1qmfln wrote

I remember in the early 2000, a guy was house-sitting for my buddy. When he came home after a week, and turned on his plasma TV, it was burned in a still of g4y p0rn. Took weeks for it to fade away. Good times.

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masseyzac t1_j1qmw0w wrote

Imagine watching the news and a guys peen is right there by the news anchors. Lmao 🤣

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Misenk0 t1_j1pdh7u wrote

That’s not right. Burn-in is not exact term which should be used here, instead we should call it burn-out. This accumulates over time. It does not matter if you watch pornhub 4h in a row every 4th day or you watch it 1h per day in a period of 4 days. The effect is the same.

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JonDoeJoe t1_j1p14x7 wrote

Actually burn in can occur regardless if there’s a static image or not

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squareswordfish t1_j1p2c8y wrote

He’s obviously talking about an image getting burned into your screen. You’re not going to get a frame of a video burned into your screen unless you pause for a long time, let alone from having the video playing lol

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JonDoeJoe t1_j1p3xyp wrote

I was addressing his statement of “burn in only happens” which isn’t entirely true.

Static images for extended time is the most common and obvious cause but isn’t the only reason.

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TylerDeBoy t1_j1pekwy wrote

How would a moving image (non-static) burn a screen? Asking for a friend

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AppleXOS t1_j1pgqrp wrote

It wouldn’t

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JonDoeJoe t1_j1pigna wrote

It would. Do you know why burn in occurs? It’s because the oled pixels are organic and degrade with use. So the pixels are degrading the moment you they’re on, whether you have a static image on or not.

The colors of oled pixels also degrade at different rates too.

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TylerDeBoy t1_j1pjcom wrote

You don’t know what burn-in means then. All screens degrade when they’re on… that isn’t what we’re talking about

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JonDoeJoe t1_j1pn7mz wrote

Then tell me what burn in is? Cuz I’m sure you’re not getting it right

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TylerDeBoy t1_j1qpz31 wrote

Stop Googling around and trying to prove us wrong 😂😂. You do not get burn in from black bars… we do not need links or sources to prove our point, so stop

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[deleted] t1_j1r1o8e wrote

[removed]

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TylerDeBoy t1_j1rbjnm wrote

😂😂 keep going bro. Your karma is falling faster than FTX. You’re 100% incorrect

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JonDoeJoe t1_j1rdf6f wrote

Nah I’m right. Karma doesn’t equate to being correct. And I don’t care about karma lol

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JonDoeJoe t1_j1rdkpv wrote

And you’ve avoided answering what burn in means too. You’ve proved nothing

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AppleXOS t1_j1ppjb4 wrote

Dude stop while you’re not too far behind. Burn in is caused by static images.

Sure all display pixels degrade in color over time.

But burn in is caused by a static image remaining static too long.

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JonDoeJoe t1_j1pu657 wrote

If you use your screen to watch a ton of movies and the aspect ratio leaves you with black bars on the top and bottom, you’ll get burn in from the middle of the screen even if the middle has all dynamic images.

Even if you use the whole screen, say if a portion of the screen tends to use saturated color more than the rest of the screen, you’ll get burn in even if everything is non-static.

All burn in is is the uneven brightness of the screen due to the degradation of pixels. Having a static image is just the most common way for burn in to happen, NOT the only way.

https://www.rtings.com/tv/learn/real-life-oled-burn-in-test

> Update 05/31/2019: The TVs have been running for over 9000 hours (around five years at 5 hours every day). Uniformity issues have developed on the TVs displaying Football and FIFA 18 and are starting to develop on the TV displaying Live NBC. Our stance remains the same: we don't expect most people who watch varied content without static areas to experience burn-in issues with an OLED TV.

Even though it’s rare for your average consumer, dynamic images still can and will cause burn ins. And this test doesn’t take into account for black bars and someone displaying content that has more saturated content in one portion of the screen over the other (it does talk about how each sub pixels degrade at different speed though)

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