Samsung just made everything else OBSOLETE

Samsung just made everything else OBSOLETE

Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “Samsung just made everything else OBSOLETE”.
Oled Displays might not be the best you can get for long.. There’S a new technology from Samsung Display who sponsored this video. That, at least on paper is better in every way., And it’s not microLED. It’S OLED, But a new kind of OLED called QD-OLED.

And Samsung Display is so confident in it that they pulled the unprecedented move of flying us and our testing equipment out for an early preview of their TVs and gaming monitors. And after seeing them side by side. With the current best of the best yeah, I think I better just say it. This is the new top of the line, and I want one. Stick around and we’re gon na show you guys how you can spot a QD-OLED just by the picture, quality itself., But first picture the quality of our sponsor.

Wait. This is sponsored by Samsung.. I out-segued myself. ( upbeat music ) If you’ve shopped for a premium TV in the last few years, you’ve probably had to answer the following question..

Am I gon na watching in a dark basement or a sunbathed living room? That’S because neither of the current leading technologies look their best in both of these scenarios., No matter how many local dimming zones you add, an LCD is always going to glow a little, and the OLED TVs on the market are simply not bright enough to be impressive Or in some cases, even usable in very bright environments., But with QD-OLED. This variable is all but removed from the equation because, like a regular OLED, each pixel can be turned off entirely for perfect blacks. And we measured 27 % greater luminance blasting full screen white compared to an LG G1, which uses LG’s evo panel.

That is itself 20 % brighter than what you would find on most of their lineup, including the C1, which is what most people buy. And in smaller areas it gets even better.. We measured a thousand nits over a 10 % patch and 1500 nits over a 3 % patch, which is a lot bigger than you might think on a 55 or 65-inch screen., So yeah, while an LCD might actually still be better for the deck of your yacht. These new QD-OLEDs are closing the gap substantially.. Of course, you could be one of those people who doesn’t really get why everyone’s so obsessed with brightness these days., But don’t click away, because it’s not just that these displays are brighter it’s what they do with their brightness..

The first thing, you’ll notice, are the reds. They’re, simply put like nothing you’ve ever seen on an OLED, before. And they’re in full force in “ Spider-Man Miles Morales” here. From the suit to the fire.

Samsung just made everything else OBSOLETE

The LG C1 looks brownie orange by comparison. And in a game like this, it’s not just eye candy, it’s immersion, like in person, this burning building looks hot.. While this one looks about as threatening as this quality desk pad from lttstore.com., Then there’s the green. During this mall chase. Look at these signs. Instead of looking like paper posters, they pop, like backlit advertisements, should making them all feel like a vibrant, purposeful setting. On the LG they’re, just kind of a generic asset.. Now, unfortunately, we had pretty bad internet in the demo room, so we couldn’t use our shield as much as we wanted, but if what we’ve seen is anything to go on, I really wan na see The Shire on one of these..

The most magnificent color upgrade, though, was gold. And there’s a really cool, color science reason for why.. We all know that white is created by mixing R G and B, but they’re, not mixed in equal proportion., There’s actually less blue, because it’s the highest energy wavelength.. But if you remove the blue altogether, you’re left with just red plus green, which makes yellow..

Samsung just made everything else OBSOLETE

Therefore yellow, is the brightest saturated color possible, and it is just stunning on the QD-OLED, whether you’re looking at a bird, a statue or a landscape. Current OLEDs look brown and drab by comparison., And this improvement in saturation means that, even if you turn the brightness of a QD-OLED way down, say you’re in a light, controlled theater room – and you don’t want it to be eye searingly bright, it will still appear brighter Than the current tech, because humans perceive increased saturation as increased brightness. Like it’s one thing to describe it, but it’s a whole other thing to actually cap our HDR test signal to both TVs at exactly a thousand nits and yet have our eyes tell us. No.

Samsung just made everything else OBSOLETE

These are different., But it all makes total sense once you understand the hardware inside., These new QD-OLEDs use only blue emitters as their light. Source. Then, since blue is a high frequency wave, it can be stepped down to green and red.. That’S done with quantum dots that are inkjet printed directly onto the emitters in an RGB, subpixel pattern..

This blue light to red or green conversion is done super efficiently, with only 10 % of the light being lost, and then on the blue, subpixel. There’S no color conversion, though the light does pass through a clear scattering material to mimic the quantum dot’s ability to spread light out evenly in all directions.. This improves viewing angles.. The end result is that nearly all of the light from the source actually makes it to the front of the display., And it does so with very precise definitions of red, green and blue.. This is in stark contrast to how WOLEDs the kind made by LG, who produced virtually every large format, OLED panel on the planet, work instead of starting with a single color. Those have emitter material for each primary color, so R G and B. These then combine into white inside the display before then being separated back out by color filters at the subpixels., Unlike with quantum dot color conversion. These filters block all of the colors they’re, not selecting for and what they do.

Let through has a relatively loose standard for. What’S considered red or green. Combine all of that with the fact that red and green OLED emitters just aren’t as powerful as the blue ones to begin with, and you start to understand the W in WOLED., It stands for white because there’s an additional, clear subpixel that Lets white light shine through to help make the image brighter..

This is why the kind of brightness matters., If you add up the brightness, that you’re getting from just the red, green and blue subpixels on the WOLED, you get a sum that is way less than the display’s overall, measured, brightness and nits. That’S because that white pixel is doing a lot of the heavy lifting.. Now on a picture of a glacier, you probably won’t care or notice, but on a landscape or a golden coin. It’S like brightening the image by turning up the game instead of by doing it. Properly.

QD-OLED, though, add up your R G and B and that’s the whole enchilada.. Armed with that knowledge. Then, let’s take a look at some color charts.. This thumbnail shaped area represents every color perceivable by the human eye..

The triangle is the BT.2020 color space, which is pretty much the gold standard for modern displays.. The points on the triangle are the RGB color primaries, and every color within the triangle can be created by mixing those three colors. See how on the G1 WOLED the primaries. Don’T quite meet the corners.: That’s why this TV can only create 75 % of the colors in the gamut., But on the QD-OLED. The reds and greens. Push closer to the edges for a result of over 90 % coverage of BT.2020. Multiply that 2D cross section over the entire luminance range that these displays can produce and you’ve got a color volume that is unprecedented in the consumer. Space..

That’S why they look more lifelike. More lively and often more red to the extent that I think we could probably pick out a QD-OLED out of a lineup just based on their warmer look.. But who cares how good it looks if it’s just gon na burn in right? That’S a valid concern, but honestly, I’m not too worried..

Remember the bit about how much more light efficient. These displays are Well. That means that the emitters don’t have to be driven with as much voltage for the same brightness, which should give them a longer lifespan..

Unfortunately, Samsung Display would not quote us specific image retention expectations, but here’s what we do – know. Number one in addition to the prevention techniques that are found on conventional OLEDs, these new panels have real-time image sticking compensation.. So it’s basically like the program that I ran on my 48-inch C10, except that it works on a pixel by pixel basis in real time. So there’s no user intervention required.

And since it’s continuous, it could extend the lifetime of the display beyond one that relies on a manual process. And number two they’re making gaming monitors, which means that they are clearly damn confident that our start menus aren’t gon na be Stuck on them, after a few months., We got to see a curved 34-inch ultra wide Alienware display equipped with a Samsung Display QD-OLED panel that made the local dimming LCD beside it. Look absolutely stupid. G-Sync, Ultimate OLEDs, instantaneous pixel response times and a 175 Hertz refresh rate come together to create what has a good chance of being the new God of gaming monitors. It even has RGB or well. All monitors have RGB on the front.. It has it on the back as well., So get subscribed for our full review of that., But do we think everyone should rush out and buy one of these next gen displays when they launched in early 2022 That depends. And yes, I give these displays high praise For days, but that was in the context of a side-by-side comparison that was obviously curated by Samsung Display, since they flew us down here to see it and sponsored this video.

And yeah, a QNED, MiniLED or a WOLED might look like it’s from the stone age. Next to a QD-OLED, but the reality of it is if you were to walk into your friend’s living room and see that same QNED, MiniLED TV you’d, probably be really impressed with it.. I sure was when I first saw one.. If I had to quantify it, I’d say that these new units are 15 to 25 % better than the WOLEDs that we have today, depending on how you score them.. By the way I didn’t even mention they can do 4K 144 hertz on TVs.. But the issue is, you can count on paying a premium for all that extra shine.? Overall, we don’t know how much that is, so, whether you buy one or not, innovation and competition in the OLED space, the penetration of OLED into the gaming monitor space and the ability for creators to more articulately communicate. Their vision to audiences gives me anything but the blues for the future.. Oh I get it the blues ,’cause it’s a purely blue light with quantum dots.. If you guys enjoyed this video, maybe go check out our QNED TV video.. That was the whole thing there.

They’Re super impressive, though .