There are, I have come to realise, two types of people in the world: those who are bothered by watching an LCD TV; and those who aren’t.
We’ve been devising this taxonomy here in the Digital Life Labs due to the review we’ve been doing of Samsung’s latest non-LCD TV, the S95D OLED. We’re in the camp filled with people who see blooming in high-contrast areas of LCD TVs, such that the blacks have all turned milky grey, and think, erk!Ours is the camp filled with people who look at OLED TVs, which display rich colours, no blooming whatsoever and, in the case of recent OLED screens, perfect viewing angles, and think, oh, thank god!and their flaws become less visible and less bothersome, we see camp LCD swelling with people, and for good reason.
A corollary to this extra brightness is a new anti-glare layer that Samsung has added to the screen of the S95D, in the hope that people will start taking OLED TVs out of the darkened rooms that are their natural domain, and into the bright rooms where LCD TVs tend to rule. Most streamed and broadcast content is still 1080p, and there’s no sign of that changing soon, even as screens get ever bigger. But with upscaling technology like this, who needs it to change?
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Source: 7NewsAustralia - 🏆 11. / 71 Read more »