It'll come down to pricing for me. The PQ is good enough for me (1K+ peak/600 fullscreen nits is still great, and 200+ dimming zones on a 65" 4K TV is solid), but if the premium to move up to the PQX is small, I'll pay it.
No one else is going to offer Quantum Dot displays with these features and pricing this year, right?
Very different from the inside of a darkened room and the light coming from a single source but yeah.
After the bombshell about now MicroLED sets are produced, there is not a change in hell those are going to make it to consumers in useful TV sizes in the next decade.
It's just a distraction until QD-OLED is good to go, which is the realistic next technology change.
Juts then bombshell that another member pointed out that the current manufacturing technique is to play each and every pixel manually onto a substrate.
That's why the current displays are low resolution , huge and like half a million bucks
It seems like with today's robotics it shouldn't be that hard to create a process by which the laying of pixels is automated, but what do i know
Juts then bombshell that another member pointed out that the current manufacturing technique is to play each and every pixel manually onto a substrate.
That's why the current displays are low resolution , huge and like half a million bucks
There are almost 25million microLEDs to be placed for a 4K display. Even modern robots cant't move that fast
Well that's a whole lot of nothing. 8K is useful only if you need a 80+ inch screen, there is practically no content for it, gaming is not very feasible at that resolution either.
TVs this year seem to be all about 8K, with none of the manufacturers making much actual progress in terms of features or image quality.
There are almost 25million microLEDs to be placed for a 4K display. Even modern robots cant't move that fast
That is the process. Simplifying it would be the key to making it an actual viable consumer technology. It has not been figured out yet, which is why it's not yet a viable consumer technology. It's been this way for a couple years now, they need a major break through in manufacturing technology in order for this to happen.Hmm that seems crazy if that's the process and it can't be simplified somehow.
Well, doesn't it have a variable framerate too tho?No, it won't help with an engine struggling to stream assets in time.
I had a TCL 6 Series, hated it for gaming, lol. Now, I came from a Plasma (the kings of motion handling), so my impression of the TCL might be skewed a bit because of that, but... Motion seemed really poor in comparison. Things were noticeably blurred in motion with trails behind moving objects. Also, sometimes when playing a game at native 4K, there are these weird color artifacts that show up in motion too, can look odd and be distracting.Thinking of getting the TCL 6 series but reading motion handling is not great for sports and gaming. Can anyone here attest?
Ask again in like a week.Was considering picking up a C9 around April as I figured it would see some reasonable sales. I want to be prepared for next gen (currently have a 2016 Vizio P). Is there any major reason I should wait or get a 2020 model?
Was considering picking up a C9 around April as I figured it would see some reasonable sales. I want to be prepared for next gen (currently have a 2016 Vizio P). Is there any major reason I should wait or get a 2020 model?
Seems like that bezelless 8k tv has some issues with warping
any specifics on resolution? Wonder if they're like the Sony Crystal LED where the 'small' 75" is only 1080p due to the size of the LEDs, and only the super big 200"+ model is full 4k
That doesn't really seem like a problem. You're never going to see that when it is on.
If Samsung ever does go with DV, is it simply a firmware update for their customers or would they need a new TV set altogether?
I believe any set capable of doing HDR10+ could receive a firmware update in theory, but don't know if Dolby allow that if it's not a feature on the box or something. Sure they could work something out.
The DV supporting sets that don't have HDR10+ could also work the other way.
get any set big enough and thing enough and you are going to not have a perfectly flat optical surface.