Retina Display is the name for the high-resolution screen technology Apple uses on various models of the iPhone, iPad, and other Apple products. It was introduced with the iPhone 4 in June 2010. Read ...
is editor-at-large and Vergecast co-host with over a decade of experience covering consumer tech. Previously, at Protocol, The Wall Street Journal, and Wired. Every once in a while, a gadget ...
Resolution is often misunderstood. You instinctively know that you want more of it, even when its real utility doesn’t live up to the marketing hype. And Apple’s new $2500 iMac has a lot of hype to ...
If you already own an iPad mini, is it worth upgrading to the new model with Retina Display? Or maybe you're considering buying your first iPad mini, and are wondering if it's worth saving a few bucks ...
Apple's iPad mini with Retina display is here, the second half of the Cupertino company's two-hit tablet refresh for 2013. Keeping the slender design and tactile metal chassis of before, but updating ...
Apple's proprietary Retina display has been a major selling point of its devices since debuting with the iPhone 4 in 2010. Apple is quick to point out devices that include it (the iPad was recently ...
After Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) unveiled the next-gen MacBook Pro, which includes the world's first 15-inch Retina Display, techies began to fantasize about the beauty of an even larger screen. (Read about ...
The term “retina display” is tossed around with increased frequency and decreased meaning. Is there really a strict definition anymore? Screen mega-expert Ray Soneira of DisplayMate points out that ...
Look down the aisles at any Apple launch event, across the laps of dozens of journalists liveblogging or in some other way documenting the goings-on, and it's inevitable that you'll see MacBooks. A ...
Dr. Raymond Soneira runs DisplayMate Technologies, which makes software to test display quality. He has a PhD in Theoretical Physics from Princeton University, and was a Long-Term Member of the ...
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