I’m assuming it works fine, but wondering if anyone here has any experience with it… Obviously, the HDR feature won’t work unfortunately…

  • dlove67@vlemmy.net
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    1 year ago

    My current setup is two alienware AW3423DWF monitors (plus a 3rd acer 1440p monitor to the side)

    I’ve seen no problems with them at all, truly black blacks and color reproduction seems great to my eyes (I’m not a professional though)

    HDR also works if I’m using steamdeck session on nobara, though in that case only one monitor is being used.

    Here’s a pic of the setup for an idea of what it looks like.

    • Petri@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 year ago

      Wow, that is an incredible setup! That’s the exact display I was thinking of buying. Did you have to do anything special configuration wise?

      Where you referring to this nobara project?

  • UrbenLegend@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Yeah it should just work as a regular display. I have a LG C2 42inch and I can drive it over HDMI 2.1 at 4k 120Hz with Nvidia 3090. Works really well and the display is beautiful.

  • levmyskin
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    1 year ago

    I’ve been using an Asus vivobook with an oled screen for the past two months. It works perfectly fine, imo especially on Wayland with the proper scaling setting. The only thing you should be aware of is that some apps still rely exclusively on X, and those will look blurry

    • Petri@lemmy.mlOP
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      1 year ago

      Do you know if your OLED screen has a standard pixel layout or if it has one of the modified ones?

      For example QD-OLED are structured in a triangle and some of the LG ones have 4 instead of 3 (if I’m recalling it correctly). The result on windows for both of these is a slightly more blurry text.

      • pitbuster@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        The blurriness comes from the (fractional) scaling mechanism use for X applications inside Wayland. Some time ago KDE enabled a mode that fixes blurriness (using the “native” X scaling).

        • levmyskin
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          1 year ago

          yes exactly, it doesn’t have to do with some screen specifics, but rather with the fractional scaling (honestly, with any scaling at all in my experience)

  • any1th3r3 [he/him]@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I’ve been using a LG 27GR95QE for a couple of months now and I love it.
    One of the issues with OLED monitors is sub-pixel rendering/layouts being different than usual LCD, which you can mostly bypass in Linux (I’ve been using it for work and am really not bothered after 8hrs/day looking at code).