I heard LG is using RGB (and white?) filters in front of their OLEDs? Is that correct? I also heard that will allow each oled to age at the same rate and side steps the whole blue oled degrading sooner.
LG EM9600 OLED TV
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HTC's Nexus One phone uses an OLED screen and it doesn't have any problems with noticeable image degradation. On a two year old Nexus One phone that has its screen on 98% of the time, the picture will look just like it did when the phone was brand new.
Is the supposed image degradation problem really a bad thing though? Don't OLED screens have over saturated colors out of the box? I would think if the image lost some of its color this would fix the over saturation problem.
The original Nexus screen (and any cell phone OLED screen that isn't a Samsung Super AMOLED Plus version) uses a Pentile screen array which has a makeup of 2 green subpixels for every red and blue subpixel. They are differently sized, but they are much different than your traditional RGB, or RGBW in this case, subpixel arrays on a display. Since we are more sensitive to green than red or blue this helps in our perception.
With the HD colorspace (Rec 709), Blue only makes up 7% of the white point, so if you had a 20% loss of light to this point, that would have dropped from 7% to 5.6%, which is much less noticeable than if you had a 20% loss in green, which accounts for 71% of that visible light. For this reason unless we are doing actual measurements of the screen with instruments, it can be really hard to tell if the blue subpixel has degraded much at all on a pentile OLED screen.