Is it just the viewing angle on the screen?, move your head up and down and see if the color changes.
OP, is this on Safari 4? Regardless, try a different browser.
I suspect that what you are seeing is a form of "submarining" which is commonly seen in LCD displays that have relatively slow pixel response rates. Personally, I wouldn't be concerned about that unless it affects video playback (smearing or color shifts in moving objects). How does it look when you watch fast-action videos? How about in a video game?
Does your display have the "wave" effect when scrolling that you could see on the first generation unibody MacBook? A good test for this is the Apple Home page which has a solid block of graphics at the bottom ("iTunes this week"). To test, scroll rapidly up and down through this graphic using the scrollbar thumb control (not with the trackpad two-finger scroll).
Sorry, it's on the Apple startpage:I wasn't able to find "iTunes this week" on apple.com. What do you mean by the scrollbar thumb control? Are you saying just click the up or down directional arrow on the scrollbar?
Sorry, it's on the Apple startpage:
http://www.apple.com/startpage/
The scrollbar thumb control is that blue/gray-shaded area in the scrollbar that you can use to scroll up and down in a page (click and hold, then move up or down). It's not the up/down arrows.
I've found that blue links are purple all the time. Greens seem almost florescent.
9C9E screen here, and I do notice that google result links look a bit more purple when I scroll, as opposed to appearing blue when not scrolling. Green looks fine though, I don't see this "wave" effect.
Perhaps this is a variation between different 9C9E screens?
Edit: I just calibrated my display, and google results text no longer turns purple while scrolling. My calibration could use some more tweaking though. Does anyone else with a 9C9E screen want to post their calibration settings file?
I suspect that what you are seeing is a form of "submarining" which is commonly seen in LCD displays that have relatively slow pixel response rates. Personally, I wouldn't be concerned about that unless it affects video playback (smearing or color shifts in moving objects). How does it look when you watch fast-action videos? How about in a video game?
Does your display have the "wave" effect when scrolling that you could see on the first generation unibody MacBook? A good test for this is the Apple Home page which has a solid block of graphics at the bottom ("iTunes this week"). To test, scroll rapidly up and down through this graphic using the scrollbar thumb control (not with the trackpad two-finger scroll).
Just got my new 13" MacBook Pro and I notice the purple links turning bright blue while scrolling.
Bought my 13" MBP today 9C9E screen. Returned it same day. Worst screen ever! All blue links were purple, whites looked yellow, screen was washed out. Horrible. 😎
Should have used one of the calibration profiles in the thread on this board. Makes it look realllllly, reallllly good. I was shocked at how different it looked compared to the "stock" profile.
Should have used one of the calibration profiles in the thread on this board. Makes it look realllllly, reallllly good. I was shocked at how different it looked compared to the "stock" profile.