As if the differences between LED, OLED, QLED and microLED were not baffling enough, there will be a new technology ¸íǰ·¹Çø®Ä«½Å¹ß=¸íǰ·¹Çø®Ä«½Å¹ß in town: Mini-LED.
This involves using smaller light-emitting diodes than normal, to illuminate a screen's colour pixels. This allows there to be more distinct ³²ÀÚ·¹Çø®Ä«»çÀÌÆ®=³²ÀÚ·¹Çø®Ä«»çÀÌÆ® lighting zones, which in turn should reduce the blooming effect you sometimes get when light spills from bright objects in a È«Äá¸íǰ¿©¼º½Å¹ß=È«Äá¸íǰ¿©¼ºÁö°© È«Äá¸íǰ³²¼º½Å¹ß È«Äá¸íǰ¿©¼º½Å¹ß scene into surrounding darker areas.
It won't produce the deep ½º¸¶Æ®TV·»Å»=½º¸¶Æ®TV·»Å»ÂøÇѰ÷ blacks of OLED, where each pixel is self-illuminating. Nor will it match microLED tech, where the diodes are so small they can be assigned to the pixels on a 1:1 basis.
But it should deliver an impressive HDR (high dynamic range) picture at a relatively affordable price.
TCL has confirmed it will launch Mini-LED TVs at CES, and other brands may do so too, even if they call them by another name.
Also look out to see which brands ·¹Çø®Ä«½Ã°è»çÀÌÆ®=·¹Çø®Ä«½Ã°è»çÀÌÆ® adopt the new Filmmaker Mode
A number of Hollywood directors, including Martin Scorsese, James Cameron and Christopher Nolan, have spearheaded an initiative to let TVs display movies as their creators intended.
At a single button push, motion-blurring is switched off, and the colours, frame rate and aspect ratio are all adjusted.
LG, Panasonic and Vizio have already Æä¶ó°¡¸ð=Æä¶ó°¡¸ð¿©¼ºÀÇ·ù indicated they will adopt this in at least some new TVs.
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( 2020-01-05 00:22:47 Á¶È¸:1070 ) |
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