Samsung Discreetly Fixes Galaxy S9 Black Crush Issue With May Update

Samsung Discreetly Fixes Galaxy S9 Black Crush Issue With May Update

6 years ago
Anonymous $CLwNLde341

https://wccftech.com/samsung-discreetly-fixes-galaxy-s9-black-crush-issue-with-may-update/

Like most flagships, the Samsung Galaxy S9 and S9+ launched with its fair share of bugs, the most annoying ones being call quality issues and dead zones in the touchscreen panel. It took Samsung several updates to fix the call quality issue and that one’s settled, for now. Additionally, Snapdragon-based variants of the flagships were found to have a bug which could trigger a device reboot, but that seems to be more of a problem with the Adreno 640 GPU, thank the devices themselves.

One of the less talked about bugs was with the super AMOLED panel being unable to display deep blacks properly in HDR mode, otherwise known as black crush and colour banding issues. It results in a grainy or a pixelated picture with blocks of black which is immediately apparent when watching dark images or videos. The problem is not entirely new as has been a recurring theme across several of the S9’s predecessors.

Samsung Discreetly Fixes Galaxy S9 Black Crush Issue With May Update

May 29, 2018, 9:28pm UTC
https://wccftech.com/samsung-discreetly-fixes-galaxy-s9-black-crush-issue-with-may-update/ > Like most flagships, the Samsung Galaxy S9 and S9+ launched with its fair share of bugs, the most annoying ones being call quality issues and dead zones in the touchscreen panel. It took Samsung several updates to fix the call quality issue and that one’s settled, for now. Additionally, Snapdragon-based variants of the flagships were found to have a bug which could trigger a device reboot, but that seems to be more of a problem with the Adreno 640 GPU, thank the devices themselves. > One of the less talked about bugs was with the super AMOLED panel being unable to display deep blacks properly in HDR mode, otherwise known as black crush and colour banding issues. It results in a grainy or a pixelated picture with blocks of black which is immediately apparent when watching dark images or videos. The problem is not entirely new as has been a recurring theme across several of the S9’s predecessors.