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Samsung Claims Its QLED TV Features the Most Color Accurate Panels Around

SherDil

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With Sony, LG and others pre-occupied with their new OLED panels, Samsung is apparently in a different ballpark altogether with its QLED, or quantum-dot LED technology which is arriving later this year with its Q9, Q8 and Q7 TVs.

The TVs are supposedly providing some improvements over OLED panels, particularly when it comes to brightness and viewing angles. At up to 1500-2000 nits of brightness, these are likely the brightest panels that you can buy. Samsung gives credit to something called “metal coating” to help achieve this, but refused to detail it further.

The QLED panels are also said to be supporting the entire DCI-P3 color volume, and supposedly has zero color degradation. There is still some form of backlighting, but in QLEDs it is beamed from all directions, compared to LCDs which throw it only from one direction or OLEDs where pixels self-emit it.

Samsung is also putting a lot of focus on its new mounts and stands. One such mount goes towards the back of the wall and seemingly leaves no gap between it and the TV. There’s another such stand which can swivel the TV, while a new thin, fiber-optic cable essentially blends into the wall and become near-invisible.

The content is provided by the Tizen interface, which comes with its own music section and a dedicated sports mode, doubled with services such as Netflix, Amazon video and Hulu.

The panels are said to be available some time in 2017 in 55, 65 , 75 and 88-inch iterations with no further details mentioned.

https://propakistani.pk/2017/01/05/samsung-claims-qled-tv-features-color-accurate-panels-around/
 
With Sony, LG and others pre-occupied with their new OLED panels, Samsung is apparently in a different ballpark altogether with its QLED, or quantum-dot LED technology which is arriving later this year with its Q9, Q8 and Q7 TVs.

The TVs are supposedly providing some improvements over OLED panels, particularly when it comes to brightness and viewing angles. At up to 1500-2000 nits of brightness, these are likely the brightest panels that you can buy. Samsung gives credit to something called “metal coating” to help achieve this, but refused to detail it further.

The QLED panels are also said to be supporting the entire DCI-P3 color volume, and supposedly has zero color degradation. There is still some form of backlighting, but in QLEDs it is beamed from all directions, compared to LCDs which throw it only from one direction or OLEDs where pixels self-emit it.

Samsung is also putting a lot of focus on its new mounts and stands. One such mount goes towards the back of the wall and seemingly leaves no gap between it and the TV. There’s another such stand which can swivel the TV, while a new thin, fiber-optic cable essentially blends into the wall and become near-invisible.

The content is provided by the Tizen interface, which comes with its own music section and a dedicated sports mode, doubled with services such as Netflix, Amazon video and Hulu.

The panels are said to be available some time in 2017 in 55, 65 , 75 and 88-inch iterations with no further details mentioned.

https://propakistani.pk/2017/01/05/samsung-claims-qled-tv-features-color-accurate-panels-around/


 
Samsung’s QLED TVs start at $2,500




Samsung touted its new QLED TV series as the next step in TV achievement at CES this year. The TVs, which come in three models — the Q9, Q8, and Q7 — are supposed to be brighter and have improved color reproduction as compared to the company’s OLED line. Now that Samsung, Amazon, and Best Buy have opened up preorders for the TVs, we’ve got pricing details.

The series starts at $2,499.99 for the 55-inch Q7F flat panel 4K model and goes up to $5,999.99 for the 75-inch flat panel model. Meanwhile, the curved versions, like the 55-inch Q8C curved panel 4K model, start at $3,499.99 and go up to $4,499.99. We don’t have pricing or availability for the Q9 flagship model yet.

Beyond the actual display improvements, these TVs include other new aesthetic features, including the “Invisible Connection cable,” which runs from the TV to an external breakout box with the HDMI ports and other critical connections (but not power). This is designed to keep the home theater area a little less cluttered. The TVs also include some new software features, including a sports mode and an expanded music section.
 

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