That explains a lot. In this case I seriously urge you to go to nearest computer store and look at the laptops with IPS displays first hand. It could be hard to truly gauge the difference otherwise. The video from the link I posted earlier shows the difference pretty good, but then again, it's a video and you are watching it on a TNLockheed wrote: I don’t think I ever saw an IPS in person.
I have recently resized an FHD desktop screenshot to 1600x900 to see how would the difference between HD+ (131 PPI) and FHD (157 PPI) look. Although I would really prefer an HD+ IPS panel (or, even better, 16:10 WSXGA+), FHD is not that bad.Lockheed wrote:I think 1080 might be an overkill for such a small display, but it probably won't be much different.
I do graphics processing every day both at work and at home using external displays and I can tell you that it's impossible to get even somewhat truthful color/tonal reproduction (or grey tones in BW photography) on almost any TN screen. Even uncalibrated IPS/MVA is incufficient as it can easily have wrong gamma or some odd native white point instead of 6500K. Doing graphics work on such display you make adjustments based on what wrong colors and contrast your display shows and get incorrect results.Lockheed wrote:I occasionally do woth with Photoshop and graphics processing, but mainly watch movies, surf, write and work on it.
X1 display is a basic 6 bit TN with 262k of colors, while IPS panels we are talking about are high gamut with 16.2M of colors and about 97% sRGB coverage. Even though actual color count is probably less in both displays, you get the idea. Here is a photograper's experience with X1 display - http://www.dpreview.com/forums/thread/3 ... t-50447504
Now, movies look much better on an IPS screen as you actually have black instead of dull grey and colors are more, well, colorful. And writing and working feels better because of the consistent brightness/color, independent of viewing angle.
I have not seen ghosting or smudging on an IPS for years, I don't think it still exists anywhere but the cheapest IPS displays. Backlight bleed, on the other hand, was present to some degree on every IPS display I used, but the only times I ever notice it are in movies and even then it still doesn't bother me.
To get the AC wireless card working you need to flash a custom BIOS to remove whitelist. Unfortunately, you will have to do it using a hardware flasher as Tx30 series BIOS is locked for software flashing.ji2o0k wrote:My T430s has 16GB of ram - 500GB SSD and if I can get this IPS panel on - I am good to go!! Only other thing I am thinking of is the AC wireless card and maybe a mSata drive down the road....
An mSATA drive is godsend if you have a mechanical HDD (like I do), but I'm not sure if it would make any noticable difference considering you already have an SSD as your main drive.




