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Apple Plans Wider Color Gamut for Future MacBook Pro, iMac, and iPad Pro

Apple plans to adopt OLED panels capable of displaying a much wider range of colors, according to a new report from research firm TrendForce.

iphone x flexible oled display
The new panels would cover 95% of the BT.2020 color standard, which describes a far broader spectrum of colors than the DCI-P3 standard Apple's screens currently target. In practice, that means deeper, more accurate reds, greens, and blues. Reaching those richer colors demands more precise control over the light a display emits, along with better energy efficiency, so TrendForce expects the next round of ‌OLED‌ competition to hinge less on familiar specs like brightness and thinness and more on balancing color, power consumption, and overall performance.

Apple first brought ‌OLED‌ to the iPad Pro in 2024, and the technology is expected to come to the MacBook Pro between 2026 and early 2027. To reach the wider color range, panel makers are changing the chemistry of the layer inside each pixel that actually produces light, moving from a simpler recipe toward more sophisticated designs that pass energy between materials more efficiently.

TrendForce points to several of these new approaches. One makes a pixel emit a purer, more precise color, which is what lets a screen reach the tougher BT.2020 targets. Another adds a "helper" material so the pixel turns energy into light more efficiently. A third mixes in extra materials to keep a panel bright for longer without wearing out.

The shift is also a chance for display makers to rely less on technologies they have to license from others. All of this is said to be changing the relationship between the companies that manufacture displays and the companies that supply the materials inside them, with the winners increasingly being whoever can offer the best mix of cost, ease of manufacturing, and freedom from patent licensing.

Apple plans to adopt the more advanced ‌OLED‌ panels gradually across future ‌MacBook Pro‌, ‌iPad Pro‌, and iMac models, according to the report.

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Top Rated Comments

Steve01234 Avatar
2 days ago at 07:55 am

Current OLED panels already display over 1 BILLION colors. I wonder how many people can tell the difference or even care? Sounds like another reason to increase the price by using a more expensive panel technology.
pretty much most folks will be able to see the difference - humans can see between 32 and 64 BILLION colors, so 1B is just 1/32 of what we can typically see. sRGB is a tiny color space.

Fun Fact : Rec. 2020 covers 75% of all colors humans can see, P3 covers 53%. P3 has a slightly smaller area outside of R2020, but is otherwise well enclosed by it.

Rec. 2020 extends much further into the cyan, deep green, and dark blue boundaries of human vision.

All that said, we are still delivering video to Rec 709 for compatibility with old displays while many displays are in the P3 range :(
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
turbineseaplane Avatar
2 days ago at 06:53 am

Current OLED panels already display over 1 BILLION colors. I wonder how many people can tell the difference or even care? Sounds like another reason to increase the price by using a more expensive panel technology.
I'm sure it won't be long before someone chimes in about their "need" for more color gamut range.

I agree with your take and it honestly just cracks me up.
We are so far beyond what basically everyone needs to do essentially everything.

Tech is in such a depressing place to me.
The ideas have all run out (seemingly) and it's now just trying to turn everything to "11" and/or turn the screws on consumer costs, as opposed to solving actual issues.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
2 days ago at 06:51 am
"The new panels use a dedicated GPU and VRAM and will come with a starting price of $30,000 due to supply shortages from AI, Tim Cook said before leaving Apple."
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
2 days ago at 08:30 am

I'm sure it won't be long before someone chimes in about their "need" for more color gamut range.

I agree with your take and it honestly just cracks me up.
We are so far beyond what basically everyone needs to do essentially everything.

Tech is in such a depressing place to me.
The ideas have all run out (seemingly) and it's now just trying to turn everything to "11" and/or turn the screws on consumer costs, as opposed to solving actual issues.
While I wouldn't say I need it, I did see a difference between sRGB and P3 in photography.

There are also some nice use cases in web design too where you can use media queries to make some colours really pop. Again not a necessity by any means, but considering where phone displays were 20 years ago and I thought "nice, 256 colours!", there's always new ways things to experience and take for granted I suppose.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
2 days ago at 06:38 am
Current OLED panels already display over 1 BILLION colors. I wonder how many people can tell the difference or even care? Sounds like another reason to increase the price by using a more expensive panel technology.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
2 days ago at 08:40 am
Being that a human with the best eyesight can barely discern one million colors, doesn’t this new spec trend a bit on the utterly absurd?

At any rate. Goodbye eyeballs. The only way to push out billions upon billions of FAKE colors is to use wicked temporal dithering.
You think the dithering on the current MacBooks is bad - we ain’t seen nothing yet. Utter pixel flashing chaos.
Glad I got my sRGB iPad a while back. The end of a (healthy) era.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)

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