Slacor I'm sure PWM doesn't help much, especially on an LED, but I have my Dell U2410 on 0% brightness, which means maximum backlight flicker, yet it doesn't seem to bother me (perhaps from the fact that fluorescent lights "glow" a bit from the "off" mode of the PWM duty-cycle). Detecting PWM flicker was always easy with the pencil test, or even recording the screen with my iPhone 6S+ on "SLO-MO" video mode. Are there similar easy methods of detecting this second form of flicker in temporal dithering? How would I be able to tell if the new OLED TV has dithering?
What's interesting about the color of my Theraspecs lenses is, if you set f.lux to a low-enough Kelvin level, the screen almost looks the same as if you were wearing the lenses! That must mean FL-41 is quite good at subtracting blue light from the visible spectrum! It's always been a good tint for migraine sufferers for many years.
Sunspark I don't know what "Chroma" is exactly. All I know is that I sensed inconsistent frames when it came to the actual motion of video itself. I chalked this up to that MotionPlus or MotionFlow artificial algorithm that would make movies look like a soap opera. I can't stand this mode. When I bought a Samsung 40" TV in 2008, this mode was turned on by default, and it gave me nausea or motion-sickness, as my brain knew it wasn't real. Once I disabled this mode on my Samsung, that nausea went away and never came back.
What is 4:4:4 versus 4:2:2? Is that talking about frame "judder"? The whole 60 Hz versus 120 Hz deal? I must be a bit behind in my research! I think I also did have that TruMotion turned off, as from my experience in the paragraph above
KM Aside from the "pencil test" or recording the screen with "SLO-MO" mode on my iPhone 6S+, both of which I have done, I have not seen any evidence of a PWM-flicker myself. As earlier stated, I am sensitive to both PWM LEDs and PWM-free LEDs.