Mine shows purple links in iGoogle as well. My iPad 1 and my gf's iPad 2, my iPhone 4S, and my MacBook Air shows Blue. Also, if you look at the Notepad icon, the yellow is almost Neon yellow, compared to the brownish yellow that you'll see on the other devices. 🙁
Yes, dark blues are leaning toward purple too much on mine as well, also yellow looks like neon lemon yellow.
Look at this 2 pool ball below, which is a gorgeous blue on my ipad2 and retina iPhone 4s but has a a purple hue on the new iPad.
Pool ball clip art, look at this on your iPhone 4s then the new iPad.
http://www.clipartof.com/portfolio/...3d-billiard-pool-ball-solid-blue-2-61777.html
I think the 3 is displaying a little better gamut of colors or it might be calibration too. I noticed this with when I saw this difference on my wide gamut IPS monitor vs an ordinary IPS monitor.
Go here.
http://www.lagom.nl/lcd-test/viewing_angle.php
Go the second color, it is purple on the ipad and look at the same link on a standard monitor, it might be pale blue or lavander. the true color is purple.
scroll down some more and you'll get the real blue color.
The masses are @$$e$... Just lined up my IP4, IP2, IP"3" (how cryptic will those be this time next year?), and 2006 White 24" iMac, all displaying that image. And let me tell you, one of these things is not like the others...
I'm not even going to waste my time with a spectrometer now, it's purple. Give it a week, and if no calibration or solution pops up, gonna swap it.
Yes, dark blues are leaning toward purple too much on mine as well, also yellow looks like neon lemon yellow.
Look at this 2 pool ball below, which is a gorgeous blue on my ipad2 and retina iPhone 4s but has a a purple hue on the new iPad.
Pool ball clip art, look at this on your iPhone 4s then the new iPad.
http://www.clipartof.com/portfolio/...3d-billiard-pool-ball-solid-blue-2-61777.html
It's very very very deep blue on my iPad 3 and MacBook Pro. No hint of purple.
Good Read. Quote from Ctein
"Can't speak to whether or not you have a defective screen, but "blues" should go more "purple" on the new iPad. The iPad2 inaccurately rendered blues as too light and shifted towards cyan. The new iPad renders them very close to correct (as compared with a properly calibrated D65 studio monitor). I see no big difference in the rendering of pure yellows between the iPad2 and the new iPad, but the slightly warmer (and more accurate) color temperature of the new iPad could make them look subjectively different (i.e., compared to the "white," yellows would look slightly warmer on the iPad2).
If you don't like this color rendition, then return the new iPad, but don't expect Apple to "correct" it. It's actually much more correct now than it was in the iPad2."
This better explains my above test, and why out of all of my displays, only the iPad 1 was showing a difference in color.
It's very very very deep blue on my iPad 3 and MacBook Pro. No hint of purple.