MicroLED should also be more efficient than OLED, especially with brighter content, and that'd be especially great for mobile devices and very large displays.
For "The Wall" if they'd just gone with 16 (4 wide, 4 high) 55" 1080p resolution displays (for 220" diagonal) it'd have similar PPI, and I bet they could sell those individually to consumers - where they could upsell how you could just add more later to increase size and resolution so for 4K you'd buy 4 of them and have 110" display that would beat projectors in brightness and low light quality. But even 1080p with all the benefits of OLED and much less drawbacks, I think there would be a decent amount of people that would be interested. I know I would. And there's a decent amount of people that enjoy 1080p projectors at 100-120" where this would be an upgrade for them, while offering them the ability to have 4 individual 1080p displays if they might have that need (think of sports bars where when there's a bunch of games on they have separate displays, but then when its just one big one they'd have one big screen), or add more for an even bigger 8K display later on, but they could grow towards it.
Which, I like their modular approach in that it'd be more flexible on configuration. If you went vertical alignment it would better fit 2.35:1 content (4320x1920 = 2.25, so not quite but it'd be better fit than 16:9 7680x4320). And you could add displays as you can afford them or needed.
And if they could make the displays flexible, but not fixed, so you could make them concave or convex to fit the situation would be popular with digital signage.
The 75" is "The Window", and the 219" is "The Wall". Presumably, this is a Get Low reference. I wonder how many people at CES have talked about the sweat dropping down their balls at this exhibit.
I'm curious what the backend technology of the display is. Most of the traditional LED displays run a NovaStar based control system (with Planar and Barco doing their own thing). These systems can run high resolutions, I've help put together a 7680 x 2160 resolution wall but the base resolution for the system was 1920 x 1080 with a high end multi-view processor between the LED controllers and the content switcher to splice the 7680 x 2160 (or two UHD) source into eight 1920 x 1080 sections. Each section was composed multiple 135 x 120 pixels panels that linked to an aggregate board with multiple aggregate boards per section.
Regardless, main point is that to drive crazy high resolution displays like this, their is typically a series of systems used to break down a single display source across source. While a single panel internally does something similar (even current 4K displays due similar processing to operate as four 1920 x 1080 panels), the additional reasoning for LED displays is the incredible size of the panel.
Samsung could have an in-house processor or one aspect of the system but I suspect that it isn't entirely their own.
The issue seen with just a 75" demo unit is that initially it will be quite expensive and/or hard to shrink down microled no only for smaller TV's but also for monitors and worse for mobile devices.
The near future approach for smaller display is using miniLED (based on microLED) to offer local dimming zones for smartphones/tablets as cheaper alternative to AMOLED, better if using with VA panels instead of IPS.
I saw this idea probably one of the comments in youtube. I will be fine with LCD displays using large microLEDs as backlight, not as bright but a dark room can fix. Considering the cost of QLED displays, Samsung will charge an arm and a leg for microLED TVs.
Hisense were demoing "ULED XD" where they use 2 LCD filter. A black and white 1080p filter worlks with the local dimming to efectively create a very fine and high contrast local dimming. Then a second 4k color filter creates the final image on top. Reportedly the contrast is near OLED levels and the technoclogy is quite cheap.
Yeah despite the hype of bigger screens a more impressive demo would be say a 55" MicroLED. The problem with MicroLED is making them small enough. Current "MicroLEDs" are more like "mini-LED". That limits the dpi and thus how small the screen can be for a given resolution.
"Separately, Samsung introduced its 75-inch Micro LED Ultra-HD TV aimed at general consumers."
Not in this reality.
The 75" concept is still assembled in modular tiles. While this is fine for massive corporate applications. The seams would be visible for in home usage.
It would be absurdly expensive. That is the real nut to crack.
Sony showed a much more consumer oriented 55" Micro-LED set back at 2012 CES, calling it Crystal LED. Of course it never showed up because there is still now way to do this economically for consumers.
Don't hold your breath waiting for a Micro-LED consumer TV.
I chose which model to buy and then I found a site with a good price and quality. QLED is one of the coolest model of the TV! I am really happy) http://sale-plasma.info
Yes, these LEDs have huge potential and they have ended the era of even typical LCDs and LEDs after 4K innovations. I am a big fan of this technology. I wish that nursing students laptops should have enough 4K Leds installed. https://besticious.com/best-laptops-for-nursing-st...
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22 Comments
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darkswordsman17 - Friday, January 11, 2019 - link
MicroLED should also be more efficient than OLED, especially with brighter content, and that'd be especially great for mobile devices and very large displays.For "The Wall" if they'd just gone with 16 (4 wide, 4 high) 55" 1080p resolution displays (for 220" diagonal) it'd have similar PPI, and I bet they could sell those individually to consumers - where they could upsell how you could just add more later to increase size and resolution so for 4K you'd buy 4 of them and have 110" display that would beat projectors in brightness and low light quality. But even 1080p with all the benefits of OLED and much less drawbacks, I think there would be a decent amount of people that would be interested. I know I would. And there's a decent amount of people that enjoy 1080p projectors at 100-120" where this would be an upgrade for them, while offering them the ability to have 4 individual 1080p displays if they might have that need (think of sports bars where when there's a bunch of games on they have separate displays, but then when its just one big one they'd have one big screen), or add more for an even bigger 8K display later on, but they could grow towards it.
Which, I like their modular approach in that it'd be more flexible on configuration. If you went vertical alignment it would better fit 2.35:1 content (4320x1920 = 2.25, so not quite but it'd be better fit than 16:9 7680x4320). And you could add displays as you can afford them or needed.
And if they could make the displays flexible, but not fixed, so you could make them concave or convex to fit the situation would be popular with digital signage.
deathwombat - Friday, January 11, 2019 - link
The 75" is "The Window", and the 219" is "The Wall". Presumably, this is a Get Low reference. I wonder how many people at CES have talked about the sweat dropping down their balls at this exhibit.teldar - Sunday, January 13, 2019 - link
What is get low?nathanddrews - Sunday, January 13, 2019 - link
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=get+lowI immediately thought of this track when I saw the press release. LOL
Kevin G - Friday, January 11, 2019 - link
I'm curious what the backend technology of the display is. Most of the traditional LED displays run a NovaStar based control system (with Planar and Barco doing their own thing). These systems can run high resolutions, I've help put together a 7680 x 2160 resolution wall but the base resolution for the system was 1920 x 1080 with a high end multi-view processor between the LED controllers and the content switcher to splice the 7680 x 2160 (or two UHD) source into eight 1920 x 1080 sections. Each section was composed multiple 135 x 120 pixels panels that linked to an aggregate board with multiple aggregate boards per section.Regardless, main point is that to drive crazy high resolution displays like this, their is typically a series of systems used to break down a single display source across source. While a single panel internally does something similar (even current 4K displays due similar processing to operate as four 1920 x 1080 panels), the additional reasoning for LED displays is the incredible size of the panel.
Samsung could have an in-house processor or one aspect of the system but I suspect that it isn't entirely their own.
Lolimaster - Saturday, January 12, 2019 - link
The issue seen with just a 75" demo unit is that initially it will be quite expensive and/or hard to shrink down microled no only for smaller TV's but also for monitors and worse for mobile devices.The near future approach for smaller display is using miniLED (based on microLED) to offer local dimming zones for smartphones/tablets as cheaper alternative to AMOLED, better if using with VA panels instead of IPS.
zodiacfml - Sunday, January 13, 2019 - link
I saw this idea probably one of the comments in youtube. I will be fine with LCD displays using large microLEDs as backlight, not as bright but a dark room can fix.Considering the cost of QLED displays, Samsung will charge an arm and a leg for microLED TVs.
valinor89 - Monday, January 14, 2019 - link
Hisense were demoing "ULED XD" where they use 2 LCD filter. A black and white 1080p filter worlks with the local dimming to efectively create a very fine and high contrast local dimming. Then a second 4k color filter creates the final image on top. Reportedly the contrast is near OLED levels and the technoclogy is quite cheap.namechamps - Monday, January 14, 2019 - link
Yeah despite the hype of bigger screens a more impressive demo would be say a 55" MicroLED. The problem with MicroLED is making them small enough. Current "MicroLEDs" are more like "mini-LED". That limits the dpi and thus how small the screen can be for a given resolution.vitalik - Sunday, October 27, 2019 - link
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"Separately, Samsung introduced its 75-inch Micro LED Ultra-HD TV aimed at general consumers."Not in this reality.
The 75" concept is still assembled in modular tiles. While this is fine for massive corporate applications. The seams would be visible for in home usage.
It would be absurdly expensive. That is the real nut to crack.
Sony showed a much more consumer oriented 55" Micro-LED set back at 2012 CES, calling it Crystal LED. Of course it never showed up because there is still now way to do this economically for consumers.
Don't hold your breath waiting for a Micro-LED consumer TV.
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patronjon - Monday, March 25, 2019 - link
I chose which model to buy and then I found a site with a good price and quality.QLED is one of the coolest model of the TV! I am really happy)
http://sale-plasma.info
zapk - Wednesday, February 12, 2020 - link
Download MOD Android Apps & Games. - https://z-apk.com/plague-inc-mod-apk/Fan Ature - Saturday, February 22, 2020 - link
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Sorry for the wrong link - https://apknature.comalexburt - Tuesday, March 10, 2020 - link
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alexburt - Tuesday, March 10, 2020 - link
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https://www.robomodo.com/sims-4-challenges/
Fan Ature - Tuesday, April 7, 2020 - link
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Yes, these LEDs have huge potential and they have ended the era of even typical LCDs and LEDs after 4K innovations. I am a big fan of this technology. I wish that nursing students laptops should have enough 4K Leds installed. https://besticious.com/best-laptops-for-nursing-st...Iqra - Friday, April 17, 2020 - link
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