You can definitely tell the difference, but only if you truly BELIEVE you can. Since the point of the retina technology is that the resolution is imperceivable by the human eye, you shouldn't be able to see a difference from a usable viewing distance. If you think you can.. well.. you're probably also an audiophile
and more importantly they are IPS, so actually suitable for proper work.
subjective. if you like working on a 15" glossy screen then yes.![]()
Out of the box the retina display needs no calibration either.
every screen should be calibrated at least monthly. it will slip out after time even if it is close to your prints out the box.
Nifkin said:Yes. I have a calibration tool to do just that. But the fact that it didn't need calibrating in the first instance is impressive. I've calibrated a lot of IPS displays out of the box and they all have been noticeably in need of correction.
I'd say its more of a fluke, unless anyone knows if apple pre calibrate in the factory?
On the above, not all software versions support it. Adobe suites for example.
Worth checking before hand.
I'm using a 15" retina Macbook Pro and would suggest you install SetResX This allows you to set the resolution to the actual resolution of the screen...
This means that every program works with it with no fuzzyness in anything at all. The only downside is that some icons and text are a bit small but that isn't a major issue because in a lot of packages you can increase the text size etc anyway. The utility is free and certainly worth giving it a go.
Top quality pictures displayed at native 2880x1800 is remarkable![]()