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Originally Posted by Teknikal
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Thanks but I know how it works and why we are seeing it here. It is what was called in the film era "the strobe effect".
Your link applies to CRT displays not LCD displays. They just refresh differently which is why we started using them a couple decades ago as an effort to combat eye strain issues, well at least that was one reason...less worker's comp claims. I do seem to remember some early LCD monitors claimed less eye strain due to high refresh rates. And LCD's do refresh but just in a different manner as compared to a scanning CRT which is what stood out to me in the video, that characteristic rolling flicker.
I always understood LCD's sort of blink really-really fast and do not scan because the backlight provides the light and the pixels are adjusted independently. The rolling flicker was due to that scanning refresh.
Maybe what that really shows seeing is AMOLED panels actually have quite a slow refresh rate whatever the method. Maybe making them less than ideal for those who had problems with the old CRT monitors.
I seriously doubt anyone would visually notice the refresh cycling. Yet it's possible it may have an effect on some.