TCL Nxtpaper products have exactly one advantage: the matte display. PWM-free and moderate price are welcome.
Unfortunately, there are also sincere disadvantages:
- no guaranteed update period
- missing direct sale in Europe
- therefore, even missing the EU-guaranteed update period
- camera bump
- 2200x1440 means the display ratio 1.53, which is too large.
David Chien writes:
"might help reduce headaches and eye strain for those who are sensitive to flickering screens and harsh glare"
Is this manufacturer PR or do you have impartial evidence? Subjectively, I can believe it but your responsibility as a journalist is to distinguish objective from subjective.
"Glossy displays [...and...] PWM [...] cause [...] nausea [...and seizures]"
Is this manufacturer PR or do you have impartial evidence?
"nano-matrix lithography"
Is this manufacturer PR or do you have impartial evidence that the matte display finish has a structure in the nanometer scale, i.e., the scale of wafers sold for $1000 to $10000?
TCL has unveiled the NXTPAPER 11 Plus tablet, combining a glare-free, paper-like display with NXTPAPER 4.0 tech to help ease eye strain and reduce health problems. The tablet has an 8-core MediaTek Helio G100 CPU, a 120 Hz 2,200 x 1,440 display, 8 GB of RAM, 256 GB of storage, and runs Android 15.