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Wow, Wacom's finally stepping up to 32"? I wonder if it'll still have the ginormous bezel that the 27UHD currently does - likely an intentional decision to provide a mounting area for their ExpressKeys remote, as well as a resting place for one's palm when working near the screen edges.As for Wacom, I'm talking about their high end models (anything 24"+), not the smaller monitors. In May, they'll be selling their 32" version. The 24" one is 4k with a 10-bit monitor as well. But you'll be spending $3k+ and the thing doesn't come with a stand, so probably $4k+ in the end. I currently use the 27" one, but with the bezel, it's very big, and very heavy. I'm debating on upgrading, mainly because of the parallax for drawing as well as the lag between what you draw and what you see. (And the touch controls don't work too well on their old models).
Sadly, when shopping for desks, most desks now are designed for lightweight LCD monitors, and don't support the weight of it (~55lbs), which is lighter than CRT monitors of yesteryear.
But none the less......what does a craptastic tiny 27" 4k144hz FALD have anything to do with a craptastic 4k 60hz TV?
I think its going to be $1,999 for the US market. Higher than that an they are asking for a failure to launch IMHO
But none the less......what does a craptastic tiny 27" 4k144hz FALD have anything to do with a craptastic 4k 60hz TV?
Sadly, when shopping for desks, most desks now are designed for lightweight LCD monitors, and don't support the weight of it (~55lbs), which is lighter than CRT monitors of yesteryear.
Regardless of the price we need a real review of the display to determine if the panels are any good, because the precedent for FALDs manufactured by AUO on monitors is extremely poor so far. And it's not like their quality on the previous M270 panel is winning any awards, either.
Huh? Even cheap-ass Ikea desks made out of particle board and prayers have a 200+lb load limit.
Sawdustboard furniture slowly warps under loads well below their advertised maximum - which I assume is a crush weight. Years ago I bowed a 4 foot desk down by an inch in the front center with an ~50lb 17" CRT placed in the middle and an 50lb book bookshelf on the back edge to one side leaning up against the wall.
This seems more like a design issue with the desk. The IKEA desks I've had had a proper metal frame underneath the desk board so any bending just isn't happening.
You not getting real HDR nor the refresh rate from cheapo Costco TVs. I agree that the price is insane for these. They should be 1k. $1300 at most.FUCK THAT you can keep your shit for 3k.
I can go to Costco and get a epically badass 4k 60" for way less and have HDR galore.
https://www.costco.com/LG-65"-Class-(64.5"-Diag.)-4K-Ultra-HD-OLED-TV.product.100343124.htmlYou not getting real HDR nor the refresh rate from cheapo Costco TVs. I agree that the price is insane for these. They should be 1k. $1300 at most.
I'm sure you can find used desks from the CRT era sturdy and big enough if you aren't up to building one.
Ok I been proven wrong. Didn't know costco carried LG OLED TV.
TFTCentral said:According to our sources the Acer Predator X27 (27" 4K 144Hz HDR G-sync) is not expected to be available until August at the earliest at present, with Q3 still likely for mass availability across Europe. We are still trying to confirm the Asus ROG Swift PG27UQ status
My friend is even calling me out for cheating in FPS because I don't even need a scope on my 50" TV.
TCL announced that Guangdong Juhua Printing Display Technology developed a 31" 4K OLED display. According to the report from Korea, Juhua Printing is using 6-Gen substrate which are cut in half for the organic layer ink-jet deposition which is done at 4.5-Gen.
TCL hopes to finalize the inkjet mass-production technology development by 2019, on 11-gen substrate.
Juhua Printing was established in 2016 by TCL's CSoT and TianMa) as an "open-innovation platform" to develop ink-jet printing of OLED panels. Other collaborators in this platform include CEC-Panda and TADF developer Cynora.
Source:
Seesaa.net
Tags:
CSOT
OLED ink jet printing
Posted: Mar 11, 2018 by Ron Mertens
Just imagine if the ufo was your entire viewport while you moved it at speed mouse looking and movement keying.. and with a whole world of high detail textures and depth via bump mapping
We can barely get 100fps+ at 2560x1440 and 3440x1440 with a single 1080ti on on the most demanding games, several requiring some over the top settings to be turned off, settings dialed in/down a bit. You could always run a 21:9 rez on a larger 4k screen.
"Note that while many of the former pictures are focused on blur reduction, higher frame rate on a high hz monitor (without using duplicated/interpolated frames) also provides greatly increased motion definition, motion path articulation, smoothness (and even animation cycle definition) of individual objects and of the entire game world moving in relation to you while mouse looking and movement keying in 1st/3rd person games So even if you had a 1000hz monitor using advanced interpolation, you would still need to run it at 100fps x 10 (or 125fps x 8, 200fps x 5) in order to get the greater motion definition benefit aspect of higher hz."
Samsung JS9000. It's 48" or 49".What HDTV are using for your 50" ?
HDMI 2.1 https://www.flatpanelshd.com/news.php?subaction=showfull&id=1511934073
The first phase of HDMI 2.1 certification starts in the second quarter, with full certification expected to begin in the third or fourth quarter of the year. Products with the official stamp of approval can be launched following successful certification.
Besides support for 8K and 10K resolution as well as 4K resolution at 120fps, HDMI 2.1 supports Dynamic HDR to enable “multiple static and dynamic HDR solutions”. It features eARC that “supports the most advanced high bitrate home theater audio formats, object-based audio, uncompressed 5.1 and 7.1, and 32-channel uncompressed audio” with audio bandwidth up to 37 Mb/s
- Variable Refresh Rate (VRR) reduces or eliminates lag, stutter and frame tearing for more fluid and better detailed gameplay.
- Quick Media Switching (QMS) for movies and video eliminates the delay that can result in blank screens before content is displayed.
- Quick Frame Transport (QFT) reduces latency for smoother no-lag gaming, and real-time interactive virtual reality.
- Auto Low Latency Mode (ALLM) allows the ideal latency setting to automatically be set allowing for smooth, lag-free and uninterrupted viewing and interactivity.
This HDMI upgrade stuff is getting stupid. Why don't they just make HDMI a module/card that can be removed and upgraded???? Having to replace your entire display, A/V receiver, media player and/or cables is madness! This is consumer electronics stuff....not the PC world. Sorry...just feel like ranting.
I'm not buying a $1k+ display again until everything is fully HDMI 2.1 compliant...period.
This HDMI upgrade stuff is getting stupid. Why don't they just make HDMI a module/card that can be removed and upgraded???? Having to replace your entire display, A/V receiver, media player and/or cables is madness! This is consumer electronics stuff....not the PC world. Sorry...just feel like ranting.
I'm not buying a $1k+ display again until everything is fully HDMI 2.1 compliant...period.
Sadly, when shopping for desks, most desks now are designed for lightweight LCD monitors, and don't support the weight of it (~55lbs), which is lighter than CRT monitors of yesteryear.
Interested in what the BFGD's will look like and price wise but...
At least 4-5 large if this is anything to go by?
I really doubt that. The BFGD is smeary craptastic VA and 2019 OLEDs will be on the horizon by the time the BFGD comes out later this year. They will be lucky to get $2500 for them.
It is extremely low density. It is like having resolution of 24x16 behind panel.384 zone is a relatively high density