Dolby Vision™ and Dolby Atmos®.
LG OLED TV is the ultimate expression of a cinema-quality experience in the home. Premium content achieves the pinnacle of picture quality thanks to Active HDR with Dolby Vision™. The Dolby Atmos® audio is just as impressive, surrounding the audience as in the most advanced theaters.Discover the LG OLED Wallpaper TV — the thinnest TV available. At just 4mm thick, it delivers cinematic images and sound and an impossibly slender profile. By now, most of us are used to seeing thin TVs that measure just a few inches deep.
The 65-inch version is going to sell for a gut-wrenching $7,996 (about £6,370 or AU$10,590) while the 77-inch version will come in at a take-out-a-mortgage sale price of $19,996 (about £16,000 or AU$26,500). Why are they so expensive?
Dubbed 'wallpaper TV', the 55-inch screen is 1mm thick and weighs just 1.9kg. In fact it's so light it can be mounted on a wall and held in place using just magnets. A magnetic mount is attached to a wall and the TV goes on top, peel off the TV to take it down. It uses Organic Light Emitting Diode (OLED) technology.
To display art, open the Google Home app and find your Chromecast device. Tap on it, tap Ambient mode, tap Art Gallery, and then you're done. If you would rather display family photos or images you've taken, you'll want to load them to a specific gallery in Google Photos.
The LG OLED TV is ultra-flat in comparison to other televisions. To retain the character of these OLED TVs, we offer OLED wall mounts that allow you to mount your screen just 1.5 cm from the wall. If you would prefer more space between your television and the wall, we also have mounts for this, of course.
Unsurpassed OLED technology. While the glass is stunning, the OLED panel that sits on the glass is even more amazing. LG OLED TVs with AI ThinQ® use the latest panels, with brighter, self-illuminating pixels designed to truly deliver stunning imagery.
LCD stands for “liquid crystal display” and technically, both LED and LCD TVs are liquid crystal displays. The basic technology is the same in that both television types have two layers of polarized glass through which the liquid crystals both block and pass light. So really, LED TVs are a subset of LCD TVs.
Because the glass used in LCD monitors isn't as shiny as the glass used in windows, many people mistake it for plastic. It's actually a very thin, compressed form of glass optimized for easier viewing.
Do not spray water directly onto the TV, but apply a small amount of water on the corner of the microfiber cloth. Never use cleaning fluids, wax, or chemicals. Turn the TV off and let it cool down for a few minutes before unplugging it. To clean the screen, gently wipe it with a microfiber cleaning cloth.
Raw or annealed glass pass through different processes, including exposure to high temperature in a furnace. Toughening or tempering makes raw glass four to five times stronger and safer. After the toughening process, glass pieces are laminated with PVB sheets.
Clean the product with a soft cloth dampened with a small amount of water. Do not use a flammable liquid (e.g. benzene, thinners) or a cleaning agent. Sony: Wipe the LCD screen gently with a soft cloth. Stubborn stains may be removed with a cloth slightly moistened with a solution of mild soap and warm water.
The new QLED 8K uses 99 percent of its front surface for the display. There is a bezel, but it's hard to perceive at just 2.3 millimeters. The TV itself is incredibly thin at 15 millimeters. Samsung has on-device, AI-powered upscaling for making content appear closer to native 8K resolution.
If you've got old TVs sitting around that still work, consider donating them instead. Try calling up your local Goodwill, Salvation Army, or even a school or public library, and see if they're in need of a TV. We've donated 65-inch 4K HDR TVs to the Goodwill around the corner, so I know it can be done.
Indeed not. Plasma TVs used to generate a lot of heat. LED/LCD TVs generate a bare minimum, hardly noticeable heat. OLED TVs also don't heat up.
OLED price plunge
In 2020, there will be five OLED TV brands from which to choose. That's a significant leap forward. Vizio, Philips, and Chinese brand Konka will all bring OLED TVs to the U.S. this year, and that can only mean one thing: OLED TV prices will be dropping.In theory, OLED TVs should offer better overall eye comfort than QLED and any other LCD-based screen, because OLED produces significantly less blue light than LED-backlit QLED TVs.
The sound quality of the LG C9 OLED TV could be better. In our experience the overall volume output was quite low compared with that of other TVs we tested this year. (The higher-end LG E9 and W9 TVs offer better sound.) Sony TVs still offer slightly better video processing, especially when it comes to motion.
LG, Sony, JVC, and others have all announced or shown upcoming 4K displays. On the other, there's OLED: Organic Light-Emitting Diode. Significantly better picture quality than your current TV, plus lower energy consumption, and even thinner cabinets. With 4K, you get 3,840x1,080 pixels per eye.
There are two reasons for the higher OLED prices. The OLED was priced so high back in 2014 because at the time it was extremely difficult to manufacture the ultra-thin set. The panels were so thin (just 0.17 inches thick) that LG could only make so many of them so it had to keep prices high and therefore demand low.
Sony's excellent processing technologies may make them worth extra money in some cases although LG is really putting forth the effort in processing capability in 2018/2019. While OLED TVs are still more expensive than good 4K LED TVs, the gap has narrowed.
They don't need 4K content to look amazing
But they still look incredible when watching regular movies and TV. That's because the OLED screen technology doesn't rely on resolution and HDR to deliver deeper black colours and incredible contrast. So even if you're not watching 4K HDR box-sets, OLED is worth it.Sony vs LG
Sony TVs will generally have better picture quality than LG TVs. Even their IPS models, which use the same panels as LG, will tend to have better uniformity and get brighter. As a rule of thumb, it's pretty hard to be wrong when buying a Sony TV.OLED TVs really are good for your eyes. LG Display said, "while the highest spec 65-inch LCD panels produce 64 per cent blue light, LG Display's OLED panels emit only half that amount". It's worth pointing out that Samsung gained the same certification from TÜV Rheinland for its mobile OLED displays earlier in the year