rolls_rapide
Well-known member
IFA 2017
I watched the Panasonic Press Call on Youtube, and thought the Japanese lady executive was supremely elegant and modest in her presentation.
I've been trying to watch the Samsung presentation - and I can't! Their idiot presenters make me want to 'punch their bloody lights out'!
With such statements as: "Before we created the Samsung Add-Wash, it was impossible to pause mid-cycle and add something". Rubbish! We've been doing that for yonks.
As an aside, I was reading up about the differences between OLED and QLED television technologies. OLED is apparently the newest, thinnest, most sophisticated technology, able to fire each pixel separately, so you could have bright whites alongside pitch blacks, giving good contrast ratio. Overall brightness is lower than QLED.
QLED still relies on previous technology backlighting, which means colours are brighter than OLED tvs, but if bright whites are displayed, blacks become shades of grey.
The suggested next step in tv technology would perhaps be to marry the two technologies together, to give the bright colours of QLED with the contrast ratios of OLED. Interesting stuff.
I watched the Panasonic Press Call on Youtube, and thought the Japanese lady executive was supremely elegant and modest in her presentation.
I've been trying to watch the Samsung presentation - and I can't! Their idiot presenters make me want to 'punch their bloody lights out'!
With such statements as: "Before we created the Samsung Add-Wash, it was impossible to pause mid-cycle and add something". Rubbish! We've been doing that for yonks.
As an aside, I was reading up about the differences between OLED and QLED television technologies. OLED is apparently the newest, thinnest, most sophisticated technology, able to fire each pixel separately, so you could have bright whites alongside pitch blacks, giving good contrast ratio. Overall brightness is lower than QLED.
QLED still relies on previous technology backlighting, which means colours are brighter than OLED tvs, but if bright whites are displayed, blacks become shades of grey.
The suggested next step in tv technology would perhaps be to marry the two technologies together, to give the bright colours of QLED with the contrast ratios of OLED. Interesting stuff.