Samsung OLED TV hybrids in the works, according to a report

Samsung OLED TV hybrids in the works, according to a report
Samsung's QD-OLED TVs appear to be in production, if there's anything to be seen in a new report from The Elec. The online publication notifies that Samsung Display is now entering the prototype phase of its QD-OLED hybrids, which combine the company's quantum dot filter technology, which is used to enhance color and contrast in its QLED lineup, with the kind of organic led panels that are used today. . OLED TVs. Samsung QLED has been an OLED contender for some time, though the former technically still relies on traditional LCD technology. A hybrid TV that combines the best of both worlds could reap the benefits of OLED while using QLED technology to outweigh its drawbacks, especially when it comes to panel brightness. According to The Elec, prototype models of QD-OLED TVs and monitors are entering production at Samsung Display, with mass production set to begin in late XNUMX if manufacturers approve dealer prototypes. Unsurprisingly, Samsung Electronics appears to be the primary target manufacturer for the technology, but the report also cites "Sony and Chinese decor manufacturers" (probably Hisense and/or TCL) as other potential customers for the service. The report builds on months of gossip surrounding Samsung considering a switch to QD-OLED. In early XNUMX, we learned from Korea IT News that the largest TV maker on the planet could move to OLED, or at least some kind of OLED, as early as XNUMX, with plans to invest XNUMX trillion won (plus or minus €XNUMX billion / €XNUMX). billion / AU €XNUMX billion) over the next few years in QD-OLED technology.

To concentrate

This all fits with these latest reports, with mass production in late 8 surely preparing Samsung for the commercial launch of a range of QD-OLED TVs in early 60. It would certainly be a huge upset for Samsung, which uses a number of different panel technologies. Although it primarily sells QLED (Quantum Dot Light Emitting Diode) TVs, Samsung also launched in XNUMX a ``Neo QLED'' line that adds Mini LED backlighting for dramatically improved brightness control. Samsung also publishes a certain name of Micro led televisions, which, like OLED, are auto-emissive, car les tailles de téléviseurs are encore assez grandes (seventy-six pouces, eighty-eight pouces, ninety-nine pouces, one hundred and ten pouces). en raison de la nature naissante de la tecnologia. QD-OLED TVs are also expected to launch in larger sizes (XNUMX inches or more) and will be aimed at high-end users more willing to try their hand at new and expensive TV technologies. Samsung probably starts off a bit small, with just one QD-OLED model released in XNUMX to gauge consumer interest, before introducing a trio of iterated models in XNUMX showcasing the technology at a mix of costs, which change in cost. output, resolution and build quality. We saw a similar strategy when Samsung started pushing XNUMXK TVs for real, but the potential of QD-OLED as a cost-effective alternative to OLED may allow Samsung to push the faster technology from the ground up. In XNUMX, Samsung told us that it thought "multiple technological improvements should precede the adoption of existing OLED panel technology in TVs, and no decision has been made on whether or not to adopt QD panels. OLED in our TVs." televisions". It seems, perhaps, that Samsung found the "improvement" it was looking for. Today's best deals Samsung QXNUMXT QLED TV forty-three"