SSunspark
- 42 minutes ago
- Joined Oct 18, 2015
There are two things here, one is, you don't have to leave Windows 10.. if you switch your 10 edition to LTSC you will still continue receiving patches.
As for graphic cards, you already said you're fine with AMD, but I haven't seen anyone complaining about Intel's Battlemage B580 card which isn't overpriced so you might have decent results with that one too.
If a device supports side-loading, you can install the google play services yourself. People used to/still do that with Chinese devices that don't have it installed by default.
I didn't like double invert when I tried it because it made all the colours darker. That's no good. They should continue to be the same brightness that they're supposed to be.
The amplitudes, etc. will change depending on what brightness you have set. I remember reading a review with the X that it was best at 50%.
Security is good, but be realistic too.. The Chinese don't care about nobodies like us. Americans however, would add all of us to their databases.
You don't have to move. You can use massgrave's tsforge option which will give you those patches to 2028.
You could try this experiment.. get a sheet of tracing paper and tape it flush to an LCD that you already have. That'll depolarize it in a hurry. See how it feels. Probably better done in the evening since it'll be dimmer.
Thank you for your review! That's too bad that it didn't work out for you.
I wonder what it was.. no backlight at all, and still an issue..
A review of it. I am still interested.
https://jon.bo/posts/daylight-computer-1/
Also saw this image from November showing the spectogram.
Tinnitus has many many causes, and it can include muscular tension.
I use logical scaling of 150% on Intel with all versions below 11 and it's fine.
Out of curiosity, what was the reason you replaced it? Too old, or you wanted colour?
Determine first whether your monitor is a true 8 or 10 bit panel.
- Edited
Botvinic It's in the display settings at the bottom, display zoom. Also duplicated in Accessibility>Display. What that one does is scales the screen to a non-native resolution, it can make things slightly blurrier.
So, since I was gifted an iPhone X here which I've been playing with as an iPod, I tried this double invert thing out to see what happens.. interesting.. basically it seems to make all the colours darker. You really notice it with reds especially. I can't say that is an improvement. Just use the greyscale color filter instead.. you can add a button for it in the control center.
I've been using it mostly with truetone off. What's interesting is, with it off whites look bluish and when I turn it on, it gets warmer and looks more like my android's white (which doesn't have truetone).
Every type of device is going to show steps on the contrast page. What you mean to use is the gradient page.
It's interesting comparing my regular oled device and this iphone X I recently received. White is a different shade on both.. my regular is yellow tinged, the X is blue tinged (truetone off for this comparison).
That doesn't really make much sense unless it's putting so much load on your system that it's causing voltage ripples or something.
Why don't you just use Windows Defender?
Don't worry about it. UV-A is the least energetic form and the amount is small.
I used CRTs for years and they had way more.
You can always moisturize your skin, though I never bothered. Maybe I should.
Does this issue still exist on remote connections if you scrub the driver with DDU and only use MS's Basic Display Driver that some here like?
Monochrome LCD with amber LEDs for backlight. Says no PWM as well. Intriguing!