Korean electronics company LG caused a worldwide stir when it announced its 55-inch OLED panel last week, and now the company’s rolled out two more pictures that show you what kind of remarkable TV set this is going to be.
How groundbreaking is this TV, anyway? If you’ve ever seen an OLED
screen, all of which are much smaller than this one, you’ll know how
outlandishly vibrant its colors are. And an OLED screen can be
impossibly thin. For instance, the one you see here is only 4mm thick —
take a look at the right side of the picture below and you’ll see the
woman’s finger pointing at the edge of the screen.
On its official LG UK Blog,
LG says this screen’s color is even more vibrant because of its
four-color pixels, making its picture more natural and accurate than
other OLEDs. Each tiny pixel emits red, green, blue and white, instead
of the red/green/blue used in the pixels of other OLED sets and most
other TV sets manufactured today. Does that make a noticeable
difference? We’ll take a close look at this screen and others like it at
the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) next week and give you our
first-hand impressions.
The OLED screen (organic light-emitting diode, read more about OLED technology here)
is nothing new, but here’s the innovation: Until now, it’s been
difficult to create the screens in a size this big, at a reasonable cost
and with a long-enough lifespan. The problem with this announcement is,
LG is not saying when this screen will be available, how much it will
cost, or how long it will last.
So will this be yet another spectacular CES demo of a product that
will never make it into the homes of real-world consumers? From what
we’ve seen, LG is serious about its OLED manufacturing, where it invested $226 million
in mid-2010 to create a new production facility, tripling its OLED
capacity. Many other manufacturers are whispering about OLED screens.
There are already smaller OLED screens available now, albeit at
exorbitant prices. There are small OLED screens on millions of
smartphones. This is not science fiction, folks.
The promising fact: huge OLED screens can be printed onto razor-thin
surfaces using a process akin to an inkjet printer, theoretically making
them even cheaper to produce than today’s LCD and plasma screens. And
the screens have much faster response time, with refresh rates that
could (again, theoretically) reach 100,000 Hz. They’re brighter, lighter (this 55-inch screen weighs 16.5 lb), and can even be flexible. No question about it: You’re looking at the TV the future, and the question is not if we’ll see these screens available in large sizes and affordable prices, but when.
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