Archive
We originally created the article: Why Do Some OLEDs Have Motion Blur? There is a high-speed video of a Sony Trimaster OLED display which shows the same OLED scanning method written in a paper by japanese scientists (Figure 20). OLED still uses...
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Blur Busters Dispatches From Twitter
After some Twitter issues, our Twitter is back up & running! Blur Busters is now on Twitter. Follow @BlurBusters. The EIZO FG2421 has arrived: Dispatched a...
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Photos of LightBoost 10% versus 50% versus 100%
LightBoost, a strobe backlight that eliminates motion blur, is very adjustable. The motion blur differences of different LightBoost settings have now been photographed! Is LightBoost 10% worth the brightness loss for improved motion clarity? See the...
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TFTCentral Posts EIZO FG2421 Review
While waiting for Blur Busters to test the FG2421, our friends at TFTCentral has posted their EIZO FG2421 review! Their extremely detailed review is worth a...
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Meanwhile, Around The Net on Eizo FG2421
Apparently good reviews of the EIZO FG2421 appears to be flowing in. The FlatPanelsHD review appears glowing, and Morkai of HardForum, has decreed “The first and only LCD so far i’d call good enough for anything” …. “bah, it’s good enough until...
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BENQ XL2720Z: Another official motion blur-eliminating strobe backlight
The tsunami wave of low-persistence CRT-motion-quality LCD’s continues. Hot on heels of G-SYNC official strobe mode, and EIZO’s Turbo240 official strobe mode, BENQ announces the XL2720Z (Z-suffix) with the Motion Blur Reduction feature, which Blur Busters confirms is another high-efficiency LightBoost-style strobe...
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How does EIZO do 240Hz out of 120Hz?
The EIZO Foris FG2421 is marketed by Eizo as a “240Hz” monitor.  How is 240Hz accomplished out of simply repeating a 120Hz refresh without interpolation? There a good, valid scientific rationale: 1. First pass refresh is overdriven, done in total darkness (erases previous...
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EIZO announces Foris FG2421, a 240Hz VA gaming monitor!
Eizo has announced the Foris FG2421, a new 240Hz VA monitor has been released! This is the retail gaming version of the previously released FDF2405W professional monitor which also uses a official/optional strobe backlight setting to eliminate motion blur. No interpolation is used!...
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Blur Busters helping Google fix 120Hz scrolling in Chrome
Blur Busters is helping push 120Hz-friendliness into web browsers, with TestUFO Motion Tests, the 120Hz Web Browser Tests as well as Helping Google Fix Chrome 30 Animation Bugs. Recently, Chrome has difficulties with 120Hz smooth scrolling. Even on 120hz monitors, scrolling...
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Variable Refresh Rate: Should be a part of HDMI 3.0
Variable refresh rate technology (G-SYNC) has arrived for computers. Â Apparently, such technology has spinoffs for fixed-refresh rate applications! HDMI needs to adopt this. Reduced Latency of Fixed Refresh Rates:Â G-SYNC decouples frame delivery time from refresh length, and reduces scan-out time....
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G-SYNC monitors supporting 177Hz?
At least one source mentioned 177Hz support for future G-SYNC monitors, including Guru3D. We noticed this number exactly matches DisplayPort 1.2 single channel bandwidth of 8.8 Gbits/sec. (half of 17.6 Gbits/sec dual-channel). 1920×1080 x 24-bit x 177 Hz = ~8.8...
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G-SYNC reduces input lag for fixed refresh rates too (emulators, etc.)
It is observed NVIDIA G-SYNC is also useful for low-latency fixed refresh rate applications as well: It accelerates frame delivery from GPU to monitor: Frames are delivered from GPU to monitor in 1/144sec instead of 1/60sec when running at 60Hz!...
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