The Display

The big story behind the new iPad mini is of course its 7.85-inch Retina Display. We’re talking about the same 2048 x 1536 resolution as the iPad Air, but in a much smaller form factor. The result is the highest pixel density of any Apple display ships today, tying with the iPhone 5S. The impact on the overall experience is pretty significant. Text is obviously a lot sharper, but even graphics are a lot nicer to look at on the new Retina Display. The gains aren't quite as obvious as they were on the larger iPad, but after living with the Retina mini for a while I can't easily go back to the previous version.


iPad mini (left) vs. iPad mini with Retina Display (right)

I ran Marco Arment's image retention test on the Retina mini and didn't see even the slightest degree of image retention. My old, non-Retina iPad mini on the other hand exhibited image retention. I suspect Apple is multi-sourcing its displays here, which could obviously contribute to varied behavior. At least on the two minis I have, image retention isn't an issue.

In the conclusion of my iPad Air review I wrote about the new mini as finally being a no-compromises smaller iPad. Much like my assertions last year of a Retina mini not being in the cards, it turns out that I was wrong on this point as well. Although display resolution is no longer a concern on the mini, color gamut hasn’t changed between the old and new minis. A quick look at our gamut test gives us an idea of what’s going on:


The iPad mini with Retina Display has the same color gamut as the standard iPad mini, which is narrower than the iPad Air and less than the sRGB coverage we normally look for. The biggest issue here is that there are other smaller tablets in this price range that do offer sRGB coverage (e.g. Nexus 7, Kindle Fire HDX 8.9).

CalMAN Display Performance - Gamut Average dE 2000

I suspect the justification here is Apple likely views the bigger iPad as being a better fit for photographers/those who care about color reproduction, but it’s a shame that this is a tradeoff that exists between the two iPads especially given how good Apple is about sRGB coverage in nearly all of its other displays.

CalMAN Display Performance - Saturations Average dE 2000


One of the simplest visual tests is to use one of iOS 7’s more colorful wallpapers and compare the Retina mini and iPad Air side by side:


Pay attention to the color of the red triangles in the lower left


From left to right: iPad Air, iPad mini with Retina Display, iPad mini

The difference is small but apparent, particularly if you’re used to panels with full sRGB coverage like the iPad Air or any of the rMBPs/iMacs. The biggest deviations are in reds/blues and magenta in between as you can tell from the CIE chart above.

Within its gamut coverage, the mini’s panel is fairly accurate. A look at our GMB checker test shows performance competitive with the Nexus 7 and not far off the 4th generation iPad. Grayscale reproduction is also quite good. The display looks really good otherwise, but you don’t get the same visual punch you do on the iPad Air.

CalMAN Display Performance - Gretag Macbeth Average dE 2000

CalMAN Display Performance - Grayscale Average dE 2000

CalMAN Display Performance - White Point Average

Compared to the previous generation mini we’re obviously talking about a much better panel. But for those of you on the fence between the mini and Air, the Air does still hold a display advantage.

Black levels are competitive and contrast ratio stays fixed at around 800:1 regardless of whether we’re talking about max brightness or the 200 nits we run all of our battery life tests at. Max brightness is down a bit compared to the iPad Air.

Display Brightness - Black Level

Display Brightness - White Level

Display Contrast Ratio

The SoC & Performance Camera, WiFi & Cellular
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  • ws3 - Saturday, November 16, 2013 - link

    Well there you go. Apple makes excellent products, so they get good reviews. What a surprise.
    Other people also make excellent products and get good reviews. So what's your beef?
  • p_giguere1 - Saturday, November 16, 2013 - link

    Objectivity is equality in opportunity, not outcome.

    The fact Apple products may get recommended more often than competing products in no way proves a lack of objectivity.
  • BPB - Saturday, November 16, 2013 - link

    Agreed.
  • Dennis Travis - Saturday, November 16, 2013 - link

    I like Windows Phones but lets face it, App support is very bad. If I can't get what I need to do what I need to do, I will go to a product that has the support. WP8 does not have that support at the moment anyway.
  • kyuu - Saturday, November 16, 2013 - link

    What a bunch of BS. What oh-so-important apps aren't present on WP8?
  • Puberticus - Saturday, November 16, 2013 - link

    Most of them.
  • MarcSP - Saturday, November 16, 2013 - link

    I have all the apps I need in WP. You do not represent everybody. Case by case.
  • MonkeyPaw - Saturday, November 16, 2013 - link

    Perhaps he knows that he's writing to mainly potential Apple buyers. Let's face it, most people are going to stick with the platform they've already invested in (like apps, music, and videos).

    That said, I never pick up this "bias" that people claim, and I feel these Apple-bias complaints waste so much comment space here. Anand never says "go buy an Apple product or your family will disown you." He doesn't even talk about Apple's peripheral products (Airplay, iTunes, iCloud, etc.), he just calls the products what they are. I don't own a single Apple product, and I'm not a fan of iOS, but I can totally see the quality in Apple's product line, and I can even see why someone would like iOS. I own a Surface 2 and Lumina 521, but I won't deny that Apple makes a good product that lots of people like. That's all I hear Anand say in his articles. The site reviews the hardware, and lets the buyer decide what they want to buy. I just don't get why people take it so personally.
  • Puberticus - Saturday, November 16, 2013 - link

    I think people literally cannot face the prospect that they bought the wrong product. And many will defend what they did to the last dying breath. It literally becomes a religious issue.

    Which IMHO, makes no sense since the technology in question doesn't give a damn about the owner. You can see it on other sites; the minute an Apple product is mentioned, the android fans come out of the woodwork for no other reason than to dis it. And it's obvious they've never touched the product they're criticizing. What the heck is that all about?!?

    Absolutely bizarre.
  • KoolAidMan1 - Sunday, November 17, 2013 - link

    Android fanatics on tech forums are louder and more irrational than any Apple user I've ever seen. Its weird since iDevices cross between both PC and Mac users.

    Teenage console fanboys are more sane than some of those people.

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