In an integrated safety analysis, the most frequent ocular serious adverse event was cataract 3. Conclusions: Visual improvements observed with both IAI regimens over laser control at weeks 52 and were maintained at week , with similar overall efficacy in the IAI 2q4 and IAI 2q8 groups.
Over weeks, the incidence of adverse events was consistent with the known safety profile of IAI. It does this by making near-white objects totally white, and darker, shadow details more gray. For live TV, like sports, this is fine. With movies and TV shows, however, they can look washed out. On the left, the original image of the walls of Tallinn. On the right, what it could look like if you set the sharpness control too high. Sharpness doesn't actually add detail. Instead, it adds what's called "edge enhancement.
Check out the image above you can click it to make it larger. See how everything has a sort of artificial edge? Not ideal. In fact, most TVs look their best with the Sharpness control nearly off.
It might take away that artificial edge sharpness, but that edge is actually masking true fine detail. Game Mode is for just gamers hence the name! It lowers input lag , or how long it takes for you to press a button on your controller to that action happening on screen. It can make a big difference depending on your TV and what kind of games you play. Game mode also makes adjustments to the picture and some TVs, notably new LG models like the C1 , allow further fine-tuning within game mode.
There are also a lot of other brand-specific settings that get adjusted too, but they're beyond the scope of this article. Now that you've figured out which picture mode you like, I highly recommend spending a few more minutes adjusting the actual picture settings.
Contrast, brightness, color, and tint, all of these could use some adjustment, no matter what TV you've bought. For the full explanation of how they work and how to adjust them, I'll again point you to our full TV picture settings guide. Adjusting the settings using just your eyeballs is great, but not perfect. To get the more accurate settings, you'll need a setup disc.
Both of these discs utilize test patterns and step-by-step instructions to help you adjust your TV's picture more accurately. And of course you'll need a Blu-ray player to use either one. There's one more way to get the absolute most out of your TV: Calibration. This is where a trained professional comes to your house and uses specialized equipment to adjust things like color temperature and in many cases color accuracy.
Depending on the TV, this could be a small improvement or a big one, but it's important to remember that if you've already set your settings with a disc, all a calibrator is going to do is check these, and adjust color temperature or color accuracy.
It's not going to transform a bad TV into a good one, but it will make your TV look its absolute best. It will also cost a few hundred dollars. Click here to change the color setting to either Vivid the default or Standard. You should notice a difference in the way colors are displayed immediately. We recommend giving Standard a go for at least 30 minutes before you decide to switch back, so you can appreciate how the two options differ.
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