Thanks for Sharing this very informative video!! I'm planning to purchase an iPad Mini 6 and I honestly never heard mention of a Jelly Scrolling problem with the device, until I was reading some of the unfavorable reviews, on Amazon. I didn't even know what Jelly Scrolling was! What really blows me away is that I work part time at a place that sells Apple products and I have yet to hear one customer or coworker mention this. Even when I handle to the demo Mini, I don't notice any problems when I go to different screens, or scroll up and down a page, and it pretty much stays in Portrait mode. I'll experiment more, when I go back. Admittedly, I'm not a techy, but I just haven't noticed what so many others have.
I loved almost everything about the new mini, but I couldn't stand that jelly scrolling compared to my mini 5. Had to return it and hope the 7 fixes this issue.
Same in my case. Today I wanted to change my mini5 for new mini6, but the jelly effect was so horrible in text and even more in pictures, that I decided to stay with my old mini5. 😢 Such a great device in hand and such a horrible implementation of the display. 😤
Vincent where is the X95J review?? In your comparison between the X90H and the X90J you said that other channels are getting much more views than you, but thats because other channels release reviews and comparisons much much sooner than you, not because their content is better than yours. Your content is literally the best out there as it is, you do not need to improve or try different things, you just need to release your reviews and comparisons quicker as by the time you release them people have already seen everything.
I was really excited to buy one of these but this jelly effect would drive me nuts so I canceled my order. Once you get accustomed to the smoothness of high refresh it’s hard to go back
I have an iPad Mini 6. It's a fantastic device,very portable and probably ome of the best iPad ever made..but has this jelly scrolling so i really don't know if i should return it or not.. The problem is that a new iPad mini probably will not release before 2023. It's strange that all of us noticed this jelly scrolling problem NOW, because all displays have it in one of the two orientation. For exampe,my old iPad 3 has this jelly scrolling in portait too.. And peobably the iPad mini 2 of Vincent has jelly scrolling in landscape mode.
Need 2 A15s in 2 spots. That way 1 can work in portrait and 1 can be optimized for landscape refreshing. Although if they just increase the refresh rate to 120 it wouldn’t of been an issue probably.
My iPad Pro screen has a white spot over bottom button. It's a known issue and Apple says it's a feature of the product, and reason why it's so expensive.
came here to research "Jelly Scroll issue" since iPad mini is on sale now (100 bucks off). Stayed for the dad's jokes. Also, 100$ i snot worth it for this BS, thanks for the good video.
@@AttilaTheHun333333 It’s an issue that exists with every LCD screen. The only reason you don’t notice it on most LCD monitors is because they refresh top to bottom in landscape. If you had a tilting monitor, you’d notice jelly scrolling in portrait. If it’s LCD, it has the problem. Even an iPad Pro will have this problem. 120Hz lessens it, but does not eliminate it. Every iPad in existence has this problem. Nobody noticed it until now because somebody had to create a -gate scandal with every Apple product. If iFixit hadn’t mentioned it, nobody would be talking about this now because no one would have seen it. You have to really look for it for it to be noticeable. Apple isn’t going to fix it because it’s not broken. If you don’t go out of your way to look for it, you won’t even notice it. No one else did until this past week and the problem has been there since people first started using LCD screens. Your comment is nonsense because there is no fix unless you eliminate LCD. But then you’re going to get a much more expensive product. The problem apparently also exists on OLED screens, though I’m not sure how that is possible.
@@techinrl9869 The latency between the two screen halfs is worse than on other 60Hz Apple tablets. It's not that it shouldn't be there with a high speed camera, but it shouldn't be noticable by the human eye in this intensity...then it gets a problem. And that's exactly what happens here.
@@AttilaTheHun333333 Except it isn’t. There are many people who are now saying they see it easily on other Apple tablets like the current iPad Air. Many are saying they’re seeing it on the iPad Pros. So it’s not just the mini. It’s the nature of LCD. Nobody talked about it before because nobody was looking for it, though anyone who knows how LCD’s are refreshed would know the issue exists. Apple is not known for using inferior screens. Rather their screens tend to be the best in the business. While LG and Samsung make them, they are done to Apple’s strict specs to the point where they’re better than the screens used in Samsung and LG products. Yet they still exhibit the problems. The only way you will avoid the problem is to stop buying products with screens. The vast majority won’t care because they’re not looking for it and therefore don’t see it. If you want to waste your time looking for defects where none exist, that’s your prerogative, but the only one you’re hurting is yourself and your enjoyment of tech products. Pretty soon you’ll be complaining about all those lousy Samsung displays on Android phones and tablets. A few years back, One Plus was hit with a similar accusation. They did nothing about it and people stopped noticing or caring. The same thing will happen here.
@@techinrl9869 Do you have any proof for your statement? Everything I read and see suggests the screen is indeed a tidy bit slower, making the tearing more visible compared to other 60Hz iPads.
At 2:40 when you state “… most people tend to hold their iPad mini like an e-reader” can you provide a proof source for that statement? Just curious as to how anyone could really know this.
Bruh. Those bezels are there for ergonomic reasons. It's the same thickness as iPad Pro, but since the display is smaller, it looks bigger. Without those, you can't handle the tablet without accidental touches.
@@hahaiseewhatyouredoing9086 "Bruh," First off, no one questioned their purpose, only their looks from a design standpoint by today's standards. Secondly, you definitively stated that you cannot handle the Mini 6 without accidental touches, yet I can definitively tell you that people handle their bezel-less iPhones for hours on end without accidental touches (on an even smaller screen).
@@wrenboy2726 That smaller screen is the reason. It's smaller, hence easier to hold without any accidental touches. You can't compare the way our hands handle tablet vs a phone in such way. Screen diagonal might be close but iPhone ratio is much longer than iPad, which made even iPad Mini width is much wider than say, an iPhone Pro Max. Did i tell you iPad Mini bezels are the same thick as iPad Pros? The screen is smaller hence ratio-wise it looks bigger. Or maybe do you have any reference on tablet with smaller bezels? Since most modern tablet sticks to that bezel thickness.