It’s optional, but recommended when needed here, I don’t really want to force the issue, but from what I’ve seen, the posts with some of your own thoughts usually get more upvotes.
Unlike on reddit, Lemmy post submission can have any combination of both link and text, so writing a little bit about your submission is a good general habit to get into here.
“The company has revealed that the upcoming OnePlus Ace 2 Pro includes ‘Rainwater Touch Control’ technology, which combines a custom screen chip and some algorithms to account for water on the display, and prevent it from interfering with taps and swipes.”
I wonder if it’s as simple as just slowing down the input reading to a human reaction time level. At least my screen seems to take 15 000 inputs at the same time when wet.
TL;DR touch screen working correctly when wet (ie in the rain, or in my case, the shower 👀)
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This is the reason why I recommend a submission statement and de-clickbaiting the title before submission.
Submission statements were amazing on many subreddits! I would love to see them on Lemmy.
It’s optional, but recommended when needed here, I don’t really want to force the issue, but from what I’ve seen, the posts with some of your own thoughts usually get more upvotes.
Unlike on reddit, Lemmy post submission can have any combination of both link and text, so writing a little bit about your submission is a good general habit to get into here.
But it isnt so whats the problem ?
I dont want to read the article, what…uhh…what’s the solution? And is it coming (will they sell it to) to other phones too?
Edit: read the article and there’s no mention of it. Just talks about the ram of it, as if phones were short RAM these days.
Second paragraph:
“The company has revealed that the upcoming OnePlus Ace 2 Pro includes ‘Rainwater Touch Control’ technology, which combines a custom screen chip and some algorithms to account for water on the display, and prevent it from interfering with taps and swipes.”
I wonder if it’s as simple as just slowing down the input reading to a human reaction time level. At least my screen seems to take 15 000 inputs at the same time when wet.
the tl;dr is the OnePlus video I shared here a while ago: https://lemmy.world/post/2988195