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Asus ROG Zephyrus G16 2024 review - The gaming laptop now with G-Sync OLED and Intel Meteor Lake

Started by Redaktion, February 06, 2024, 16:32:44

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NikoB

Neenyah, you dumb. You need the help of a psychiatrist because you are insane. And the moderator allows you to do this, which is quite significant. Any reasonable person has already seen everything necessary in the screenshots of AMD using my link to their website.

Neenyah

Quote from: NikoB on February 27, 2024, 11:48:24Neenyah, you dumb.
Says a silly clown who can't figure a way how to post an image here. Funny. Keep trying to get out from your stupidity, just never ever admit being wrong in anything.

Truly pathetic individual, no wonder you are 24/7/365 online and patroling around when you are all alone (who would even want to hang around with such "person"?) so, as Torreto said, "I got nothing but time."

No movie quote is better applicable to you than that one. Now hop on and reply once again, you know - yours has to be the last one in the convo to "win" in that empty shell of yours (the one on your shoulders).

NikoB

I wonder when the sick dyslexic clown 'Neenyah' will finally see the inscription in this screenshot www.amd.com/system/files/2023-07/DH3-021-1.png?

Let him try again...suddenly he will have a very rare clarification of his constant madness? ;)

Neenyah

Quote from: NikoB on February 27, 2024, 17:21:19I wonder when the sick dyslexic clown 'Neenyah' will finally see the inscription in this screenshot www.amd.com/system/files/2023-07/DH3-021-1.png?

Let him try again...suddenly he will have a very rare clarification of his constant madness? ;)

Ok, as you claim this below, the part in bold, show it on that screenshot you just linked. Show it. Take your time, I'll wait. Show the "Use Extended Display Identification Date (EDID)" checkbox". Go on.

Quote from: NikoB on February 24, 2024, 12:45:48In AMD drivers, just check the "Use Extended Display Identification Date (EDID)" checkbox and an automatic attempt will be made to auto-calibrate in sRGB any screen panel with more or less native space than sRGB.

Because I most definitely posted how it looks now and where is that whole section located now:
Quote from: Neenyah on February 26, 2024, 19:49:35And check this too, many arrows to help you with your brain insufficiency: https://imgur.com/MbCWYBT

NikoB

Clown, what difference does it make what the item is called now (yes, it's AMD's fault for confusing consumers in such a stupid way - in the screenshot (аnd next) the same item has 2 different names. The first is correct, the second is incorrect, and it is the second that is shown in the drivers) - if it does that the same function as 15 years ago?

If you clown had an AMD laptop or video card, you would check this regulator within a couple of seconds, but you don't have them.

Neenyah

Quote from: NikoB on February 28, 2024, 07:10:28(yes, it's AMD's fault
Yup. Called it:
Quote from: Neenyah on February 27, 2024, 17:10:52Keep trying to get out from your stupidity, just never ever admit being wrong in anything.

Quote from: NikoB on February 28, 2024, 07:10:28If you clown had an AMD laptop or video card, you would check this regulator within a couple of seconds, but you don't have them.
TIL, I am able to run Adrenalin and set settings in it and so on - without owning an AMD GPU. Nice. Go back under your rock, lol.

NikoB

But you clown continue to argue with what really works and what all AMD owners who have checked the settings I specified know. I received many thanks from them for this hint on specialized forums.

And this autocalibrator has not been available in Intel and Nvidia for at least 16 years... I sympathize with owners of laptops with 45-46% NTSC and those with wide gamut panels (or monitors), but there is a problem with the factory sRGB profiles. On AMD, this problem is solved by turning off one regulator. But NVidia/Intel can't solve this in principle without a hardware calibrator and tools with different software...

lmao

lmao wtf is that calibration magic you are talking about that fixes bad displays and autocalibrates(???) without calibrator.
is anyone doing calibrations aware it's a thing at all.

Neenyah

Quote from: NikoB on February 28, 2024, 19:18:13I received many thanks from them for this hint on specialized forums.
You mean in specialized institution (asylum)?

Quote from: lmao on February 28, 2024, 19:33:32lmao wtf is that calibration magic you are talking about that fixes bad displays and autocalibrates(???) without calibrator.
is anyone doing calibrations aware it's a thing at all.
Niko's delusions to make himself feel better with increased saturation on his 56% sRGB 220 nits panel.

NikoB

Such stupid clowns as Neenyah and Imao (most likely platinum bots of manufacturers or just idiots) turn any technical into a circus due to the fault of the administration. Moreover, I know for sure that the moderator monitors everything and deletes inconvenient comments for the site owners. Verified.

I wrote clearly and clearly that the shameful companies Intel and NVidia have not had a built-in EDID autocalibrator built into the screen matrix controller for more than 16 years. And AMD has it. Which really significantly improves user comfort in practice, both with poor matrices 45-46% NTSC, and with wide gamut, where there is a toxic oversaturation in color, if the manufacturer of the monitor or laptop did not take care at the software level about the actually working sRGB profile (and this is more often This is exactly the case with laptops and some monitors). This is a proven fact.

These bots have only one task - to cover up the topic with worthless garbage so that the average reader does not see the real difference in capabilities between AMD and Intel + NVidia in favor of video cards from AMD.

lmao

lmao immediate butthurt when asked a direct question.
you haven't answered how your magic "autocalibration" is working without a real calibrator tho lmao

NikoB

Quote from: lmao on February 29, 2024, 14:19:16you haven't answered how your magic "autocalibration" is working without a real calibrator tho lmao
The answer is in the description - based on the reference points recorded in the EDID of the matrix. The more accurately it is recorded initially at the factory, the better the auto-calibration in the sRGB space. Unfortunately, AMD drivers are not able to load EDID data from outside; they only work with hardware ones. NVidia//Intel does not have such a feature in the drivers - there you have to use a hardware calibrator (the profile of which used in Windows does not affect and the part of the software that is affected by the AMD autocalibrator is not used) or tinker with the colors manually, by eye, what else the orders are more complicated. And it's their shame, Intel/NVidia.

And any owner of an AMD card or igpu can easily be convinced that I am right and the extreme usefulness of this AMD chip, both on cheap screens with 45-46% NTSC, and with wide gamut screens. I have both this and that - the effect of a sharp improvement in the display of content designed for sRGB space is obvious.

This is precisely what is important for the average buyer who wants to get a quick, more or less high-quality approximation in visual terms to the sRGB space. AMD drivers have been doing all the hard work for them for 16 years.

Neenyah

Quote from: NikoB on February 29, 2024, 17:13:23NVidia//Intel does not have such a feature in the drivers - there you have to use a hardware calibrator... ...And it's their shame, Intel/NVidia.

Quote from: Neenyah on February 25, 2024, 20:19:31
Quote from: NikoB on February 25, 2024, 20:12:57Intel/NVidia doesn't have this. I checked on some 2022-2023 laptops with more recent discrete chips and this is not the case with new drivers for the 1050 either.
Lol. Inform Nvidia then that they don't have it because they must be wrong:


(With Studio drivers it is available on all Nvidia GPUs, not just Quadros)

lmao

Quote from: NikoB on February 29, 2024, 17:13:23based on the reference points recorded in the EDID of the matrix
do you think EDID contains colorimeter value for every color point? lmao.
it contains 4 XY values that define red, blue, green and white point provided by manufaturer (just bulk loaded into all screens, not measured for every produced panel, sometimes even just made up values from marketing).

so please go on, what magic is used to "autocalibrate" screen using 4 XY values and make bad displays look better, please be specific lol

NikoB

Again, two clowns are simply raving, not understanding at all what they are talking about, throwing me a link to descriptions from NVidia that have nothing to do with the autocalibrator in sRGB, it has not been in NVidia and Intel drivers for 16 years. And both do not have AMD gpu/igpu. But for some reason they got into an argument that they obviously lost and disgraced themselves in front of all the readers.

All I can do is shrug my shoulders and walk away from this further pointless argument. Those who have brains instead of sawdust, like these clowns, can easily check that I'm right on AMD hardware. And for those who don't, nothing will help them except a lobotomy...

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