OLED?

I actually saw this set in person. It had a good picture but the signal was poor. I actually preferred the 4K TV's that were right next to it. It would have been nice to see the OLED with a good signal. The 4K TV's with a good 4K signal are amazing and almost too life like.
 
I actually saw this set in person. It had a good picture but the signal was poor. I actually preferred the 4K TV's that were right next to it. It would have been nice to see the OLED with a good signal. The 4K TV's with a good 4K signal are amazing and almost too life like.

Best of third world in one unit:
1. OLED
2. 4K
3. 65" minimum size (up to 90") ...3D of course.

* Price? It don't matter; it's always expensive at the beginning and then if they are truly that good more people are buying, and the prices come down (one of the features from the capitalism system, isn't it?).
** And no goddamn curved screen, unless they make a 20-foot widescreen one, a la IMAX for your living room or bedroom.
 
LG is better than Samsung here. White pixels with color filters. Samsung went with RGB pixels and the Blue is unstable!

LG plans to release a 77 inch OLED this year and is investing heavily in factories.
 
Good to know; thx Norman.

______________

Pioneer Elite KURO plasma was good 'back-black' then.
Sharp Elite backlit with local dimming LED is great.
Panasonic latest flagship plasma is king.
Samsung high-end latest plasma set is gorgeous.

LG might become the OLED leader. ...And 4K or die.
 
Has OLED TV really got a future? | AVForums

CES 2014 - First look at LG OLED TV line-up | AVForums


However whilst 1080p OLED screens are all well and good, the future of TV is clearly 4K and here LG are currently in a league of their own. The manufacturer threw down the gauntlet to its competitors by announcing 55, 65 and 77-inch Ultra HD 4K OLED TVs. As with their other Ultra HD TVs, LG’s new OLED versions include the Netflix 4K app supported by a built-in HEVC 60p decoder, as well as VP9 for 4K content on YouTube. Although if you’re unable to get hold of any native 4K content, LG’s Tru-Ultra HD Engine Pro can upscale HD content to perfectly match the higher resolution panel. The 4K demo material at the show looked incredible with a staggering level of detail, bright images, vivid colours and truly deep blacks.

Everyone seems to be going curved this year, so it should come as no surprise to discover that all these new TVs are of the bent variety. What's far more impressive is that LG actually plan to release all three models this year. Although there is currently no pricing for the UK, LG did let slip some of the prices for the US and you can expect the 77" 4K OLED to set you back a hefty $29,999,. However, whatever the ultimate price it might be worth mortgaging your house to pay for a TV that combines the best of both worlds, with the higher resolution of 4K and the superior picture quality of OLED.
 
- Smartphones (and tablets); some use an OLED screen (Samsung) and others a Retina screen (iPhone). And the best are 1920 x 1080 full HD. ...Any which better, or equivalent?

- Laptops; screens are their downfall. ...Or they have low resolution, or they are in majority too reflective, and very restricted in their viewing angle.
Why is that? Is that because the screen is simply too thin to accommodate some decent hardware behind, or is it simply to save money (manufacturers)?

- Flat panel (curved now) Ultra HD TVs; LG seems to be taking a giant step here ahead of the herd with its leadership. ...OLED that is.
{Plasma is almost extinct, and LCD LED is also going the way of the dodo - gotta go with the new; Laser Light and OLED.}

The future? OLED is going to improve in quality*, size, and price.
...And projectors will all become bulb-less and wireless (Bulbtooth and Wi-Fi).
And 4K is certainly the feature number one. ...And 8K is coming too.

* Quality means also flat, not curved. ..So curved has to go, and the sooner the better; there is simply no room for inferior design and below average quality performance in the year 2014 and beyond.
That trend (mode advertising and fashion show) has to stop (curved TVs); it slows down progress in the name of cheap consumption, fake attraction.
We're back to the 50s with our round TVs and those curved screens from Sony Trinitons; cut from a cylinder.
Why not make them convex for true innovation, so the people sitting at extreme right or left could have a glimpse of the onscreen action!
Keep them straight, flat! ...That's how the world appears to us from up close and personal. If we would be watching TV from space, with the TV displaying on Earth, yeah then you can curve them a little so that they espouse the Earth's roundness.
 
I have seen a flat LG Oled TVs here too. The major retailers here M-Electronics and MediaMarkt have gone full out with floor room displays. Really fancy.
 
I agree, curved has to go. I found the curved OLED distracting and odd.

I agree as well! How about a flat OLED 75" or above for under $10K ($5K or under even better!) A year or two (or three) down the road?

Dave
 
I have the LG 55 Oled model and the picture is just spectacular. Is the best I've ever had. Even the 3d is spectacular. It is slightly curved but that actually works out because it fits in the spot I needed to. A regular 55 incher would not have fit by an inch or two. But I really like the set. I saw it at Best Buy and other stores for a lot of money but I want to my appliance salesman, The guy who sells me my washing machine, and I got the set for about $2500
 
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