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by int_19h
2705 days ago
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The whole point of screensavers is that they actively display something different than what the screen normally has. Burn-in is not a problem that originated with OLED, and last time anybody had that problem, screensavers were the best mitigation they came up with. |
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If the Windows taskbar is present 95% of the time that the computer is being used (with the other 5% being fullscreen applications), and a screensaver is active 40% of the time the screen is on, then the taskbar is still visible for 57% of the time the screen is on.
Maybe the tech has changed, but as of my first OLED phone 7 years ago, blue (the same color as the taskbar's Windows icon) was the fastest color to burn in.
Newer phones shift the navbar and status bar items a few pixels every minute. But the start menu icon is too big for that, so after a year or two, every time the user watched a movie in fullscreen, they would get a blue blob in the lower left corner.