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Iphone Displays The Almighty Buck The Courts Apple Technology

Apple Lied About iPhone X Screen Size and Pixel Count, Lawsuit Alleges (cnet.com) 168

A lawsuit filed Friday is accusing Apple of falsely advertised the screen sizes and pixel counts of the displays in its iPhone X, iPhone XS, and iPhone XS Max devices. The two plaintiffs, who filed the suit in the U.S. District Court of Northern California, are seeking class action status. CNET reports: The suit alleges that Apple lied about the screen sizes by counting non-screen areas like the notch and corners. So the new line of iPhones aren't "all screen" as marketed, according to the 55-page complaint. For example, iPhone X's screen size is supposed to be 5.8 inches, but the plaintiffs measured that it's "only about 5.6875 inches." The plaintiffs also allege that the iPhone X series phones have lower screen resolution than advertised. iPhone X is supposed to have a resolution of 2436x1125 pixels, but the product doesn't contain true pixels with red, green and blue subpixels in each pixel, according to the complaint. iPhone X allegedly only has two subpixels per pixel, which is less than advertised, the complaint said. The lawsuit also alleges iPhone 8 Plus has a higher-quality screen than iPhone X.
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Apple Lied About iPhone X Screen Size and Pixel Count, Lawsuit Alleges

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  • True pixels? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by scourfish ( 573542 ) <scourfish@@@yahoo...com> on Sunday December 16, 2018 @11:48AM (#57812376)
    I wasn't aware that for a pixel to be "true", it had to have a red,green,and blue subpixel. There are plenty of cell phones with LCD subpixel shapes that aren't "RGB" subpixels either. These can be for a myriad of design trade-offs, but at the high resolutions of those small displays, it's not really that noticeable. Older CRT televisions weren't "true" in their rbg pixel resolutions either.
    • http://i.imgur.com/7umOJ.gif [imgur.com]

      Gaaaaahhhhhhh! I was going to say something here but the black hole of stupidity sucked my brain in. Is this a contest for the stupidest lawsuit ever?

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      CRTs didn't have resolutions, that's not how they worked. The dots were not pixels.

      There is a great video explaining it here: https://youtu.be/Ea6tw-gulnQ [youtu.be]

      • Re:True pixels? (Score:4, Informative)

        by msauve ( 701917 ) on Sunday December 16, 2018 @03:12PM (#57813156)
        "CRTs didn't have resolutions,"

        Sure they did.

        CRT resolution is related to bandwidth, focus, and physical size. NTSC monitors were lucky to achieve 160 horizontal lines of resolution (comparable to 320 pixels), and they were fixed at 525 lines vertically. RGB monitors could do better, and often allowed the timing to be changed to increase the vertical resolution.

        Oh, and the guy in that video is using "resolution" wrong. When referring to CRTs, "resolution" was taken to mean lines of horizontal resolution [wikipedia.org]. As used for LCD displays, it normally refers to display resolution [wikipedia.org], where it's an ambiguous misnomer, but most often meant to mean pixel dimensions (e.g. 1024x768). He's saying CRTs don't have pixels, despite the fact that pixels were used to describe CRT images long before LCDs were even thought of. For CRTs displaying bit-mapped [wikipedia.org] images, the display resolution depends on both the capabilities of the display, and the device driving it. Hence, the old CGA/VGA/XGA, etc. nomenclature. Later CRT monitors could accept different timings and display resolutions.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          What we mean is that CRTs were not like LCDs with a fixed number of physical pixels. The holes in the grill and the dots on the screen are not pixels like on an LCD, pixels in a video frame.

          The video is using the common definition of the term and does in fact explain the actual resolution that you mention.

          • by msauve ( 701917 )
            "What we mean is that CRTs were not like LCDs with a fixed number of physical pixels."

            Except, a CRT alone doesn't produce an image. It's part of a system, and for bit mapped systems, there are pixels.

            "Pixel" and "resolution" have long understood meanings. Don't be disingenuous by redefining them and then saying they don't apply.
    • Re:True pixels? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Sunday December 16, 2018 @01:17PM (#57812728)
      To be fair, this was one of the criticisms Apple laid out against Samsung's original Galaxy S when it was released. That it used a pentile RGBG display instead of RGB like the iPhone, so it's 800x480 display resolution supposedly wasn't really an advantage over the iPhone 3G's 480x320 resolution. Evidently some iPhone owners still remember that, and Apple is now being hoisted by their own petard.

      Your eyes are much better at resolving green [nfggames.com] than they are at red or especially blue. Nearly every method of storing video or photos has taken advantage of this - the old NTSC broadcast TV standard, color film composition, JPEG compression, digital camera sensors, even the latest h.265 video codec. All of them stored red and especially blue at a lower resolution than they do green. So you've been looking at the equivalent of pentile images all your life and never noticed it. Unless you peep at the pixels with a magnifying glass, there's no reduction in image quality from using a lower blue and red subpixel resolution than green. The only exception I've seen is due to a long-lived MPEG bug [hometheaterhifi.com] from the 1990s which still occasionally crops up as striations in blocks of solid color, especially red, which might not have been visible at a higher red resolution.

      Unfortunately it was nearly impossible to convince iPhone owners and reviewers who'd drunk Apple's kool-aid of this fact, and Samsung eventually relented and used RGB versions of its OLED displays on their newer phones. So I'll shed no tears that Apple's chickens are now coming home to roost.
      • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

        "Unfortunately it was nearly impossible to convince iPhone owners and reviewers who'd drunk Apple's kool-aid of this fact, and Samsung eventually relented and used RGB versions of its OLED displays on their newer phones. So I'll shed no tears that Apple's chickens are now coming home to roost."

        Right, it was "iPhone owners and reviewers" that forced Samsung to use inferior technology in their newer phones. ;)

        Perhaps you might consider that your understanding of the technical issues isn't as good as it could

      • Nearly every method of storing video or photos has taken advantage of this - the old NTSC broadcast TV standard, color film composition, JPEG compression, digital camera sensors, even the latest h.265 video codec. All of them stored red and especially blue at a lower resolution than they do green.

        This is not true. You're thinking of luma vs chroma, with chroma (color information) typically being stored at 1/4th the size.

      • by qubezz ( 520511 )

        I think the argument can be made very clear - if a "pixel", which is defined as a "picture element", in your display's resolution specification, can't display the full color gamut, and the pixel unit alone can't be addressed by software independently to display any color from the advertised 16.7 billion colors, with a direct hardware correlation, than it is a lie.

        In a normal display, with RGB-complete pixels that can be independently addressed, the color values of pixels in my PNG or UI command the correct

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Now you know.

      And if you held a magnifying glass up to the old CRT monitors, you would indeed see an array of pixels, each with a red, a green, and a blue subpixel. On even older TVs, you would see an array of pixels consisting of red, green, and blue dots laid out in a triangular pattern.

  • Unbelievable (Score:5, Informative)

    by blahbooboo ( 839709 ) on Sunday December 16, 2018 @12:35PM (#57812548)

    If you didnt like the screen then return the phone next time. What a waste of time and resources this is, its a pure cash grab by some attorneys.

    • Disagree (Score:4, Insightful)

      by aepervius ( 535155 ) on Sunday December 16, 2018 @03:41PM (#57813238)
      I have no idea for the actual merit in *this* case but there is a world of difference between "did not like it" and "false advertising". The first indeed merit a scorn, the second is usually very much frowned upon by consumer and by the court (frowned upon : as in usually lead to penalty). Personally I don't care anymore if this is an attorney cash grab, what I do care is that what is advertised is what is sold, within the law. if attorney can punish a lying firm , where I cannot, then much BETTER than doing nothing.
    • What a waste of time and resources this is, its a pure cash grab by some attorneys.

      Actually I think it's karma given how Apple used to shout from the rooftops that the higher resolution Samsung Galaxy wasn't actually higher resolution due to employing the exact same tricks used here.

      Normally I'd be quite shitty, but now ... I'm okay with this. I hope those attorneys bathe in champagne.

    • Totally. And the SDD size is a bigger lie (e.g. 32 GB advertised, 10 system, 22 usable).
  • I'd like to know how they measured it to the 4th decimal place.
  • I bought one and then found out the image is sent to the device as half HD and then upscaled to full HD...Have not bothered to check their 4K model.
    • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

      "the image is sent to the device as half HD"

      With a comment this stupid you really shouldn't be participating. I would say you haven't bothered checking any model. What device are you talking about? What is "half HD"?

      Don't let that stop you from posting off-topic Apple rage though, especially when all it does is display your ignorance.

  • Does any sensible person actually care whether it is 2436x1125 or 2438x1120?
    (apart from some nerd in his mom's basement counting pixels (1,2,3,4,5,6, etc.)

    Jeez, the are more important things in this world than a few pixels more or less.
    I mean, it's not like you're gonna notice... Really, some folks ought to get out more.

    Mac

  • by sootman ( 158191 ) on Sunday December 16, 2018 @08:12PM (#57814250) Homepage Journal

    This paves the way for my lawsuit against Ford, who for decades has advertised "5.0" liter engines that are 4,942cc, or "4.9" liters, if you're going for one-decimal accuracy. I'll be rich!

    First of all, dickheads, you don't need to say "about" when describing a dimension to the ten-thousandth of an inch. Secondly, anyone who can spot the difference, unaided, between a 5.8-inch screen and a 5.6875-inch screen at arm's length wins a free trip to Uranus.

    Thirdly, Apple has this note right on their page, directly below the dimensions: [apple.com]

    The iPhone XS display has rounded corners that follow a beautiful curved design, and these corners are within a standard rectangle. When measured as a standard rectangular shape, the screen is 5.85 inches diagonally (actual viewable area is less).

    And their lawyers are better than yours, so I'm sure that's enough to get this suit tossed out on its metaphorical ass.

  • What a scummy individual, you think they really want a functional notch highlighted in marketing material...up to consumer to actually do their homework and see a device and learn about it, living under a rock if you donâ(TM)t know what the notch is. And comparing DPI and display quality is a metric not number of pixels...FOOL!

He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion

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