Left is BOE, right is presumably Samsung
Samsung panel photo taken from here:
My LE Deck OLED has BOE screen which I confirmed through that firmware dump command. I don’t have any dead pixels or any issue with the screen, but I think this difference in su-pixel structure is VERY interesting.
There’s been some complaint about red/green fringes on text, but not everyone seems to see it equally well. I looked at mine, Even looking very closely to the point Im seeing individual pixels and the small gaps between the pixels, I just don’t see it.
If we zoom in and look at the text, this is in desktop mode in Chrome, we can see there is in fact no sub-pixel anti-aliasing, the font is made up of whole pixels.
BTW I think BOE layout is better than Samsung because every pixel is symmetrical and the gaps are evenly distributed. Where as the Samsung has alternating left/right leaning blue pixels, which creates a big gap every two pixels, and this can lead to a slightly more grainy look.
You can also see the slight blurring effect from the anti-glare screen I have on mine. The blur radius is smaller than these sub-pixels, it cannot reduce the sharpness of displayed images, but it can soften the appearance of individual pixels.
The reason you don’t see sub-pixel anti-aliasing in Chrome or Firefox is because they apply their own rendering settings which is greyscale and you don’t have control over what they do.
Ungoogled Chromium will respect the system settings (I use it with anti-aliasing off) so you could set RGB or whatever subpixel arrangement (none is greyscale) in the display settings and then look in there… but what would be better would be simply to set it and then go back to gaming mode and look at how the text in the interface is rendered.
it’s the same thing in the task bar and desktop