Display: Stock Settings

I often say that a smartphone is just a display you interact with, which makes the need for a high quality screen paramount. This is even more true for tablets, which are quite literally large touchscreen displays that the user interacts with. With tablet displays having peaked in terms of resolution for the time being, manufacturers are now turning their attention toward color accuracy. Flagship devices like Samsung's Galaxy Tab S tablets and Apple's full sized iPads feature displays with an exceptional level of color accuracy, while smaller or less expensive tablets are more hit-and-miss.

Display - Max Brightness

Display - Black Levels

Display - Contrast Ratio

Unsurprisingly, the ZenPad's display is very similar to that of the iPad Mini 2 as far as brightness, black level, and contrast are concerned. While Apple has decided to round 7.85" to 7.9", and ASUS has decided to round to 8.0", I'm fairly confident both devices are using the same LCD technology with different backlight arrays. It should be noted that while the contrast ratio is similar in our measurements, when there is ambient light there will be a much more significant drop in contrast on the iPad Mini 2 due to its unlaminated display.

Display - White Point

Display - Grayscale Accuracy

Even if two devices use the same display panel, the color characteristics of each can vary significantly depending on the level of calibration, as well as the spectral range of the LED backlight used. Apple’s iPad Mini 2 achieves a level of greyscale accuracy where errors can only be seen in static content, and is good enough for editing photos and videos without concerns about the accuracy of the images. The ZenPad S doesn’t do as well, with a significant blue shift to most shades of grey. This is also reflected in the display’s high average white point of 7331K. While the ZenPad S doesn’t cost as much as an iPad Air 2 or a Galaxy Tab S2, the Z580CA’s price of $299 is exactly the same as the iPad Mini 2. With that in mind, it’s concerning to see such a gap between the greyscale performance of the ZenPad S and the iPad Mini 2.

Display - Saturation Accuracy

Saturation accuracy on the ZenPad S is much lower than what could be achieved with more attention paid to the display’s calibration. With a DeltaE average of 6.2, the ZenPad S is actually less accurate with rendering primary and secondary colors than the iPad Mini 2, despite the latter having a backlight array that only allows for narrow coverage of the blue and red parts of the sRGB gamut. The spectral range of the LEDs in the ZenPad S almost covers the entire sRGB gamut, but the panel undershoots significantly with reds, overshoots with blue beyond 60% saturation, and has various levels of inaccuracy with yellow, cyan, and most of all, magenta. I was really excited to see that the ZenPad S doesn’t suffer from the narrow gamut of the iPad Mini 2, but I was let down when I realized that the accuracy of primary and secondary colors was actually worse than the iPad due to inadequate calibration.

Display - GMB Accuracy

Accurately reproducing color mixtures requires a reasonably accurate gamma, RGB balance for grey shades, and accurate saturations. Gamma on the ZenPad S is reasonably accurate for a mobile device, but the way the display tends toward blue coupled with the inaccurate saturations results in inaccurate color mixtures as well. The ZenPad’s average DeltaE of 5.55 doesn’t compare favorably with the iPad Mini 2’s DeltaE of 3.4 which is imperfect but still fairly accurate. The reason that the iPad Mini 2 ends up being more accurate is because while it cannot be accurate outside its native gamut, within the section of sRGB that it does cover it is very accurate.

As far as the default display configuration of the ZenPad S goes, I’m not exactly thrilled. While it does have a wider gamut than the iPad Mini 3, it ends up being less accurate in every respect due to issues with rendering primary and secondary colors, and a blue shift in the greyscale. Surprisingly, the ZenPad S having a fully laminated display has done nothing to reduce black levels and increase contrast ratio when compared to the non-laminated iPad Mini 2 display, which is an additional disappointment. However, ASUS does provide a few settings to tweak the display, and so hope is not lost.

System Performance Cont'd: GPU and NAND Display Cont'd
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  • DanNeely - Monday, August 31, 2015 - link

    The "sharpening" filter that smudges text legibility is the deal breaker. Having tried using them before, I completely agree with the reviewer about how badly they suck. They might help in some circumstances; but having the opposite effect on one thing that needs legibility more than anything else makes them worse than useless as an always on feature.

    I still don't get what you're going on about the Samsung and $100 more. AGAIN, I don't find it too expensive compared to the Zenpad. If the Samsung didn't have retarded buttons it looks like it'd be a great device and I'd probably own one. Putting the same level of hardware in a chassis with buttons in the correct order shouldn't drive the price to $500.
  • MrSavage - Monday, August 31, 2015 - link

    You think the Z580CA would have blurred or smudged text? I tell you this. I'm going into a store and seeing to believe. It's late 2015 and if you're telling me that a new tablet with new technology is going to have some blurry or unclear text or visuals? If this was 2012 I might buy that.

    Regarding Samsung and $100? Have you actually gone spec by spec to compare? Beyond that, if you put 2GB of RAM (Samsung with around 3) and the same 32GB of storage? I would bet this Z580CA would be selling for $250 or less! No front speakers, no stylus support on top of that. I think your idea of reasonable or wise differs from mine.

    So you are taking a few charts on the display as being the final word? If there are any issues regarding software enhancements, I'm confident in firmware and software updates to resolve any possible issue. I have some faith in that and considering the price, it's not exactly a super risky proposition.
  • PixyMisa - Monday, August 31, 2015 - link

    On specs, the $399 S2 is closer to the $199 Z580C. I expect the AMOLED screen will be very nice, though.

    A side-by-side comparison of the 8" iPad, S2, and Z580C/CA would be very interesting.
  • Kepe - Monday, August 31, 2015 - link

    How about an HP Pro Slate 8? The only real downside seems to be the bundled pen contraption, but you don't have to use it, of course.
  • DanNeely - Monday, August 31, 2015 - link

    First I've seen it; but other than potential availability (HP doesn't have it in immediate stock, and Amazon appears to only have the Win8 model), I don't see any show stoppers in a quick look at reviews. Paying for a pen'd just end up in my junk drawer's annoying but if it's my only option...
  • modulusshift - Monday, August 31, 2015 - link

    Since I have an Air 2 running the latest iOS 9 beta, I decided to see what you meant by performance enhancements.

    Kraken 1.1 - 2446.3
    Octane v2 - 10441
    WebXPRT 2015 -
  • modulusshift - Monday, August 31, 2015 - link

    162 was the WebXPRT score. So yeah, some improvements have definitely been made. The Air 2 now out scores every tablet score you have on that table by a significant margin.
  • Brandon Chester - Monday, August 31, 2015 - link

    Yeah that's what I meant. I will be able to update the iPad Air 2 once iOS 9 releases, but I don't have an Air or a Mini 2/3 on hand.
  • modulusshift - Monday, August 31, 2015 - link

    For fun, a MacBook Pro 13 on Yosemite:
    Kraken - 2013.6
    Octane - 21636
    WebXPRT 2015 - 320
  • Kepe - Monday, August 31, 2015 - link

    In short: you get what you pay for. Display you have to calibrate yourself with software that makes it horrible, mediocre performance, mediocre build quality with low-quality materials, horrible camera, non-competitive battery life. But hey, at least you get front-facing stereo speakers that are ok!

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