

No. Romania, for example, is not. It was announced in January that we would enter the program but then they removed us in June.


No. Romania, for example, is not. It was announced in January that we would enter the program but then they removed us in June.


I joined when Apollo for reddit died.


I have an Alienware OLED (AW3423DW). I’ve been using it for almost a year now. I use it for ~13h a day, for work, gaming and media (YT, TV shows, movies). I have HDR enabled in Windows and I use the monitor in HDR1000 mode.
I left the taskbar on for a few months and it got burnt in. I also got burn-in from watching content that is in 16:9 ratio (the monitor is 21:9). The monitor also got a defect, in the form of a thick line that is brighter that anything else that runs across half the top of the monitor left to right.
Despite this experience I would still buy OLED because IMO the brightness and colors are worth it but I also warn everyone that they WILL get burn-in if they want to use it to its full potential and all day long.
OLEDs are not there yet. Maybe in a few years or decades we’ll get actual burn-in proof OLEDs


Few months ago I saw one of them driving around in a McLaren, so unfortunately they don’t seem to be that affected by the legal stuff.
For some good country check out Colter Wall