this post was submitted on 28 Jun 2023
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I'm seeing a lot of old posts about how Linux has poor support for OLED. Is this still the case? Should I avoid OLED laptops?

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[–] lawmurray@programming.dev 6 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I have Ubuntu 22.04 on a Dell XPS Plus 13 with OLED display. Looks great, battery life is good. Not sure how tuned the drivers are etc but definitely no need to avoid.

[–] zstg@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago

Battery life is decent on Wayland and not so much on Xorg.

[–] Max_P@lemmy.max-p.me 4 points 1 year ago

The only issues I can find online are related to brightness control, which has always been an occasional problem on laptops regardless of the display technology. It's happened and keeps happening with LCD panels too.

In a technical sense 99% of the time the kernel is not even involved in the process. The display output is driven by the GPU, and even then, it drives pretty standard protocols like DVI/HDMI/DP. Even laptops typically work with some sort of internal DVI/DP connector for the panel, which has its own decoder made for the actual OLED panel. The only outlier is brightness control which is sometimes done in a weird hacky way by manufacturers, wherever is more convenient for them. Some do it with ACPI calls, some do it through the GPU (intel_brightness), some do it through proprietary registers or I2C/SPI bus.

It's a "try it and see" kind of situation that depends on the precise hardware combination of a given laptop. Being an OLED might make it more likely by manufacturers to end up with a less standard brightness control, but it's not an OLED-specific problem and I doubt we'll ever see a "all OLEDs are now fixed forever". We might see brightness fixed on this particular laptop from this manufacturer.

[–] MXX53@programming.dev 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I wish I had something to contribute to answer this question, but I have not owned an oled monitor to test this on. But I would be curious to see if there is a difference between oled on linux and not. I have seen some people mention poor color accuracy when using amd cards in Linux, but I also have been unable to test this.

[–] nikstarling@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago

I own a zenbook with an OLED display and it runs just fine. Battery life is good too.

[–] lfdev@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Maybe not too late, but System76 has a tool for OLED displays, I'm not sure it works with all displays but probably it worths a try:

https://github.com/pop-os/system76-oled

[–] lemillionsocks 1 points 1 year ago

I have my desktop plugged into an OLED tv right now it runs fine and looks good. Do you mean HDR specifically? HDR doesnt work but it does seem like there's finally movement in that space with valve and others pushing for support. I think last news I heard about it was this thing.

So if you want to know if there would be a problem with an OLED screen and true blacks and all that then rest assured you're good, but HDR will not work and probably wont in the near future.

That said while you're searching around I suggest searching the model thoroughly before pulling the trigger on the buy. Laptops have a lot of esoteric hardware and acpi which means even if the big pieces should be fully compatible it might not be. Also Ive heard good things about framework but dont own one.

I appreciate everyone's feedback! I'll report back if I have any issues in my specific case, but hopefully I have the same experience all of you have had.

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