When Apple brought the Pro Display XDR (PD XDR, henceforth) to market, it seemed that perhaps they were planting a flag in the world of HDR video and stills photography creation...with the caveat that, this was exclusively for "our high-end, you can afford the cost as a business write-off" user, er, "class". As for their broader consumer user base, there would be XDR iPhones, iPad Pros and Macbook Pros to follow, but no XDR iMac.
And this has caused a problem for Apple with its everyday HDR users looking to graduate from Photos and iMovie and delve into Lightroom and FCP for their HDR workflows, they created a giant and insurmountable "cost chasm" for those looking to create at their desks...Mac Studio with a requisite PD XDR have never been a cost-sensible upgrade path for those without business dollars to spend.
Meanwhile, over in the PC world, folks were finding HDR solutions with various off-the-self HDR displays and using Davinci Resolve...and, to their credit, the folks over at Resolve saw that Tim & Co. were clearly "leaving money on the table" with that demographic, decided to port Resolve over to the Mac to steal both the cash and customers with nary a blink from Apple.
Enter, Flanders Scientific with their "Hollywood grade" monitor lineup announcing the release of an "affordable" (cough) 31.5" Gen. 3 QD-OLED HDR grading monitor with all the requisite I/O for any serious studio HDR folks...
FSI | XMP310
The XMP310 is a 31 inch UHD resolution HDR and SDR reference mastering monitor built around a groundbreaking new QD-OLED panel.
flandersscientific.com
...making them weep with joy...
New Flanders Scientific XMP310 | Lift Gamma Gain - Colorist & Color Grading Forum
Just noticed this on the FSI Website https://flandersscientific.com/XMP310/ 31.5" QD-OLED HDR & SDR Reference Display
liftgammagain.com
Then enter, ASUS with their latest 32" Gen.3 QD-OLED, for a 3rd of the cost of the Flanders and
half that of the PD XDR with a stand...
ProArt Display PA32UCXR - Tech Specs|Monitors|ASUS USA
ProArt Display PA32UCXR is a mini LED monitor with 2304-zone dimming, designed for content creators, colorists, filmmakers, video editors, and photographers
www.asus.com
...with proper USB-C/
Thunderbolt I/O for the home HDR creative. Aaand...the landscape has dramatically shifted for Apple when it comes an any possible PD XDR successor.
Their current "elite class" PD XDR users have already had to spend all the build-out costs just to get all of their studio I/O to work with Apple's display. Prospective "elite" customers are now looking at an uncluttered solution with the Flanders along with weighing their costs vs PD XDR and all the extra cost to build-out just to get a clean signal over TB3.
But more importantly, the cash cow of everyday HDR users now have far less reason to even consider "going Mac".
And, all of this could have been dramatically different for customers creating in HDR had Apple merely taken their existing MBP XDR tech (no need ot reinvent the wheel) and quad-sized it at the factory and bus-fed it into an M-Series iMac...an elegant all-in-one HDR desktop solution that preempted any need or wait for TB5 I/O. But, hey, I'm not the CEO. LOL
Do I see a need fo Apple to bring out a PD XDR Mark II? Not for my needs, that ASUS Gen. 3 QD-OLED is looking better by the minute. Now if someone will just build an AIO around that display, I'm in!

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EDIT: Corrections: The ASUS
QD-OLED display I meant to link to was the...
ROG Swift OLED PG32UCDM | Gaming monitors|ROG - Republic of Gamers|ROG USA
ROG Swift OLED PG32UCDM gaming monitor features a 32-inch 4K QD-OLED panel with 240 Hz refresh rate and 0.03 ms (GTG) response time, along with a custom heatsink to minimize burn-in.
rog.asus.com
...which is 1/5th the cost of PD XDR (with stand) w/TB I/O. The ProArt display originally linked above is also on my list of display contenders and in my haste I posted the incorrect link. Mea Culpa. My comments relating to
QD OLED technology vs PD XDR remain unchanged.
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EDIT: Also, I forgot to add my normal disclaimer: I have zero affilations with any products mentioned, links posted for educational/informational use only.
