| ▲ | userbinator 20 hours ago | |
You have clearly made no attempts to read the original article which has a lot more evidence (or are actively avoiding it), and somehow seem to be defending Samsung voraciously but emptily, so you're not worth arguing with and I'll just leave this here: I zoomed in on the monitor showing that image and, guess what, again you see slapped on detail, even in the parts I explicitly clipped (made completely 100% white): | ||
| ▲ | mgraczyk 17 hours ago | parent [-] | |
> somehow seem to be defending Samsung voraciously but emptily The first words I said were that Samsung probably did this And you're right that I didn't read the dozens of edits which were added after the original post. I was basing my arguments off everything before the "conclusion section", which it seems the author understands was not actually conclusive. I agree that the later experiments, particularly the "two moons" experiment were decisive. Also to be clear, I know that Samsung was doing this, because as I said I worked at a competitor. At the time I did my own tests on Samsung devices because I was also working on moon related image quality | ||