It appears to you that the tiktok ui items are burned in, while in fact the leds are burning out faster than the surrounding ones. So, when you use an app with a lot of static imagery on the display (like tiktok), the colors get stressed, and since the house, search, +, message and people icons on the bottom of the screen are always white while the surrounding pixels are black, the pixels in those spots burn out (yes, you read that correctly, burn out) faster than the surrounding ones, burn out? Yes, they fysically burn out, the brightness of them is not as much, if you would leave that tiktok app open 24/7, these pixels will just die and they won't be able to display anything on that spot anymore. And as we all know, leds aren't an infinite light source, they have a limetid lifespan. It's the same with your smartphone screen, it's a grid of tiny, tiny leds, on an organic substrate layer called Polyfluorene C13H8, it's impossible to build such tiny leds without this organic matter. Your phone uses an oled display, what is oled? Oled stands for organic light emitting diode, what is this? In a short explanation? Did you ever looked at advertisement boards at train stations for example? If you look close to them, you can see the individual LED bulbs, like the computer on led, these are in fact rgb leds, they can show red, green and blue, so they can show whatever color they want. I thought people wanted to know this before trying to fix their AMOLED panels using methods like these. So using this fix can be seen as a sort of trade off between not having burn in and loss of overall picture quality. However this will cause your AMOLED screen to overall be a lot less vibrant and therefore you'll lose picture quality. If it works this does results into the burn-in being removed or atleast being reduced because the surrounding pixels will also have been worn out more. Using this method you will try to "wear" out all the surrounding pixels as well by forcing all the pixels on for a long period of time. This is most likely due to static elements that force those pixels to always be on (for example notification icons on phones, navigation buttons at the bottom of the screen etc). I would like to give a note to anyone wanting to use these videos that are supposed to "fix" their burn-in on an AMOLED panel: the reason your panel is suffering from burn-in is because certain pixels have been worn out faster then their surrounding one's, which results into these certain pixels emitting less light then their surrounding one's. ![]() Other: If it doesn't fall in any of the other categories, post it here!.Tricks: Neat tricks or if you discover something that you want to share.Discussion: for discussion about Samsung or Samsung's products.Rumor: for rumors about Samsung or Samsung's products.News: for news about Samsung or Samsung's products.Link flair must be used (this prevents spam) No Offensive, Harassing or Inflammatory Language. ![]() No tech-support or “what should I buy” questions. ![]() No self-promotion (including referral links/codes).No posts that aren't directly related to Samsung.Posts must foster reasonable discussion.Join the official r/Samsung Discord Rules
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