u/A_Gentle_Nerd

Penis size and satisfaction

So, my D is 14.5cm (5.71 inches) and am 18 yo. Do you think this is below average, average or above average.

And do you think I can satisfy a girl? I can pretty easily last 3 rounds which is about 80 minutes long.

reddit.com
u/A_Gentle_Nerd — 3 days ago

I have a Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra and I’m trying to figure out whether my display is actually physically failing or if this is some kind of software/gamma issue before repair shops convince me to replace the whole screen.

About 10 months ago, a marker accidentally fell on the screen and caused a small scratch. Recently, a tiny black dead-pixel spot (~3 mm²) appeared exactly at that location. The dead pixel itself has stayed stable and hasn’t grown.

But now I’m noticing another issue:

On completely dark/black interfaces, especially at very low brightness, the black sometimes turns gray(contrast decreases by a mile) across the whole screen. However, this behavior changes dynamically depending on what’s on the screen.

For example:

- If I’m on TikTok and open the comments section, the black suddenly looks normal again.

- If only part of the screen is dark, contrast becomes normal across the entire display.

- The issue mostly appears when the whole screen is very dark/black.

- During boot/restart screens (Samsung Galaxy / One UI logos), blacks actually look normal and contrast seems fine.

- RGB tests in Samsung’s #0# hardware menu all look normal except for the original dead-pixel spot.

- No green lines, no major blotches, no touch issues.

I also noticed some crack-like patterns, but they may just be in the screen protector, so I’m not fully sure whether the AMOLED itself is physically damaged.

So now I’m confused:

- Is this likely actual AMOLED panel damage slowly spreading from the old impact?

- Or is this more likely a software/display-driver/gamma calibration issue causing lifted blacks on dark interfaces?

- Has anyone experienced black screens turning gray only in certain UI situations on Samsung OLED phones?

Repair shops here immediately suggest full display replacement, but I want to understand whether this is truly hardware failure before spending a huge amount on a new display.

reddit.com
u/A_Gentle_Nerd — 7 days ago

I have a Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra and I’m trying to figure out whether my display is actually physically failing or if this is some kind of software/gamma issue before repair shops convince me to replace the whole screen.

About 10 months ago, a marker accidentally fell on the screen and caused a small scratch. Recently, a tiny black dead-pixel spot (~3 mm²) appeared exactly at that location. The dead pixel itself has stayed stable and hasn’t grown.

But now I’m noticing another issue:

On completely dark/black interfaces, especially at very low brightness, the black sometimes turns gray (contrast decreases by a mile) across the whole screen. However, this behavior changes dynamically depending on what’s on the screen.

For example:

- If I’m on TikTok and open the comments section, the black suddenly looks normal again.

- If only part of the screen is dark, contrast becomes normal across the entire display.

- The issue mostly appears when the whole screen is very dark/black.

- During boot/restart screens (Samsung Galaxy / One UI logos), blacks actually look normal and contrast seems fine.

- RGB tests in Samsung’s #0# hardware menu all look normal except for the original dead-pixel spot.

- No green lines, no major blotches, no touch issues.

I also noticed some crack-like patterns, but they may just be in the screen protector, so I’m not fully sure whether the AMOLED itself is physically damaged.

So now I’m confused:

- Is this likely actual AMOLED panel damage slowly spreading from the old impact?

- Or is this more likely a software/display-driver/gamma calibration issue causing lifted blacks on dark interfaces?

- Has anyone experienced black screens turning gray only in certain UI situations on Samsung OLED phones?

Repair shops here immediately suggest full display replacement, but I want to understand whether this is truly hardware failure before spending a huge amount on a new display.

reddit.com
u/A_Gentle_Nerd — 7 days ago