Saturday, April 28, 2012

LG OLED TV

This television will be out on the market in October 2012. 


With a whopping 55-inch screen which is just 4mm thick. Although TVs using organic LED technology have gone on sale before, they have all been puny in size and ridiculously expensive. However, this LG 55-inch OLED TV will be the first time the world has got the chance to appreciate just what OLED is truly capable of, rather than having to squint admiringly at 11-inch or 15-inch screens.


The screens contrast is quite astonishing, at one end of the light spectrum the screen presents black colours of a richness, intensity and purity that just hasn't been seen before on a flat-panel TV, and yet on the same there could be ultra-pure, perfectly defined whites and dizzying array of colour tones in between.






In colourful daylight footage, the screens remarkable colour response is even more spectacularly obvious, revealing outstanding subtlety and range as well as explosive vibrancy.



The HD footage on show actually looks more like 4k-resolution fare so pure its presentation, and free of the LCD's usual motion blur, and so incredibly rich are the sets of shadow detail levels.

Dark areas look completely consistent in tone top, with no backlight clouding, and the image holds up much better from a wide viewing angle than typical LCD TVs.

The main flaw with this 2D image is a faint horizontal 'seam' across the screen, although i would not think that this will be present on the final product available around October.

Brighter colors, better contrast and energy efficient, the LG 55-inch OLED is priced at around $10,000 when it launches in Australia this October. There is always people with money who will buy, and even people who will be actually saving to buy the LG OLED TV, truth is our race likes to have a good quality home entertainment and as you can see by the pictures the quality is just so immensely good, that it will sell. However, i do think it would be interesting for companies to make one slightly smaller, say 32-inch, which is the average home television size, which would then be cheaper and people might be more  inclined to buy. 

Either way this product has been voted number one at the Consumer Electronics Show an it will do well!

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