Yea, different priorities. I really don't care too much about spec if the picture is underwhelming in my viewing environment and I actually buy movies and Series in 4K HDR disc like the last season of Picard and Strange new World since I hate compression (especially the Audio) from most...
You're not an average cellphone user then. not many people stream HDR media on their cellphone or use it as a screen all day and as I said, you can push the cellphone OLED as most cellphone last last than 4 years while TVs are expected to last up to 10.
Just put a OLED and a QLED in a room...
Yes but how long does an average cell phone last and how many hours are the screen on at high brightness in a day?
Most bright daylight scenes on 4K HDR movies average over 300 nits or higher. Maybe a bit less due to compression on streaming media. I have routinely pointed a light meter towards...
I know that most of you are not engineers so Ill give you a simple explanation of the OLED problem. Let say that one light bulb present 2% of the screen. so the whole screen matrix consist of 50 light bulbs. If we start with one 100 watts light bulb. Logic would say that the brightness level...
Those are not claims. They are facts well known in the industry. It is also one of the reason for the long delay to produce a 4K HDR OLED smaller than 48" while maintaining similar spec for the LG C series TV. Without a breakthrough in the organic portion of the pixel. the only way to increase...
Not everyone is that sensitive to motion blurr and even that is if all you do in game with your monitor. a lot of larger monitor fills many roles now from a desktop TV for streaming media, providing a large screen real estate for work without having to use enlarge fonts, etc. a good QLED like a...
You still don't get it. The organic pixel will degrade with heat. On small area. it can go bright by sinking heat to the surrounding area or improve cooling but once you hit a large area, brightness will drop like crazy. all OLED are pretty much limited to about 200 nits at 100%. This is...
The biggest problem of OLED is the "O". The Organic pixel just cannot take high temp, While it's possible to push the pixel to over 1000 nits on 2% area since the rest of the surrounding area is acting as an heatsink. Once the area grows, the brightness have to be brought down as you can't sink...
I have always physically turn off my display rather using the sleep function so he display not going to sleep when I put the PC to sleep or turning it off is not really a big deal. If the price difference was much more than the current $120. I would say the FV43U is perfectly fine. But the QN90B...
That's true until the QN90B. That's one reason I have a 50"QN90A instead of a 43" but it ultimately was a bit big for the desk space and my seating distance. The wide viewing layer was never a concern for me as a solo use monitor.
I have used most of the 43"-50" except OLED for the same reason. Started with a CG437K to a FV43U and then a Qn90A and now on a QN90B and the fact that it's now on sale on Amazon for $817 is a deal that cannot be beat. The black level is much better and it has 360 backlight zone vs the 8 of the...
It could definitely be the cable and it doesn't cost much to get another one. I had the same problem with a "Brand Name" high quality HDMI 2.0 cable back in the days that will lost signal once in a while at 4K@60 and I have had problem with "brand Name" HDMI 2.1 cable that will not properly do...
A lot of games support positional audio now and I also use my PC to watch media. Sure I can watch it on my living room home theater system but there're times that I just want to take a short break or watch drama that would not require a big screen. So I have a small home theater system setup for...
True most of the time but CEC have it's own hiccup from time to time. The Samsung remote will turn off the receiver when I turn off the TV but it won't turn on the receiver when I turn on the TV and I still have to grab my receiver remote when I want to change source but it's not a big deal.
I found that staying with the same manufacturer helps as you're less likely to run into a BIOS hiccup and be sure to download all the drivers on a flash drive.
I use my PC for gaming so there's really not much you can do except to upgrade every 2-3 years on the CPU and every year or two on the...