Discover the latest in display technology as we compare LCD vs. OLED, IPS vs. VA, and QD-OLED vs. WOLED. This explainer breaks down how these technologies work and which is right for you.
Discover the latest in display technology as we compare LCD vs. OLED, IPS vs. VA, and QD-OLED vs. WOLED. This explainer breaks down how these technologies work and which is right for you.
Currently the industry is using Sony's reference displays which have Oled though.TN = Lol, Nope
VA = Stick to TV
IPS = Hey, Nice light bleed
OLED = Latest FOMO cash cow
CRT = GOD TIER!
Perhaps I missed it mentioned in this article, which is fully possible, but LED TV's can and do use QD technology as well. Side note, LCD are not made anymore. They are LED. Yes, it matters. Yes they are significantly different beyond backlighting.
OLED is never viable. Ever. It is guaranteed burn-in, in a short time, regardless of the content used. Then you add in the price tag? My $175 LED outperforms every single OLED on planet Earth by a significant margin, except in contrast ratio...yet OLED are four times the price on average. All for some blacker blacks? You're delusional if you think that is worth it. All the LED technology that OLED's use can be used and is found in regular LED TV's. QD and W can be used in any LED based TV.
A fool and his money are soon parted.
Tell me you've never used an OLED screen, without telling me you've never used an OLED screen...My $175 LED outperforms every single OLED on planet Earth by a significant margin, except in contrast ratio...
That is an extremely gross over simplification. Yes, LED monitors use a liquid crystal layer, but that is where the similarities end. That's like saying old calculators from the 70's are LCD's as well. Nobody with any sense would realistically compare the two. Modern LED monitors are far more advanced using many different types of filters and layers that do not exist in LCD monitors. We're arguing nomenclature here, for the most part, but the fact is modern non-OLED monitors have very little in common with the "LCD" monitors of yore.LED displays are actually a type of LCD, but with LED backlighting instead of CCFLs.
The latest Macbooks Pro have Quantum Dots in their LED LCD displays.
Tell me you like using tired Internet memes without coming up with a cogent, rational, factual argument without telling me...Tell me you've never used an OLED screen, without telling me you've never used an OLED screen...
So you're telling me, every single review site out there, that boasts OLED as the best screens, they're all wrong? Every single one of them? Let me guess, every single website on the planet is paid off by LG / Samsung? Got it.Tell me you like using tired Internet memes without coming up with a cogent, rational, factual argument without telling me...
That's factually wrong, I could bring up the various graphs about pixel response times, colour volume, contrast ratio's etc... But a simple Google on practically any modern OLED, there's a reason they're considered the best, and priced the way they are.Show me the top end OLED vs the top end LED. The LED will have better specs in EVERY category except contrast ratio. This a fact that you cannot deny or debate, unless you're delusional.
That is an extremely gross over simplification. Yes, LED monitors use a liquid crystal layer, but that is where the similarities end. That's like saying old calculators from the 70's are LCD's as well. Nobody with any sense would realistically compare the two. Modern LED monitors are far more advanced using many different types of filters and layers that do not exist in LCD monitors. We're arguing nomenclature here, for the most part, but the fact is modern non-OLED monitors have very little in common with the "LCD" monitors of yore.
I would argue that steady incremental improvements have been incorporated into "LCD" displays.LCD panels have not changed fundamentally over the last 10 years. LCD is short for “Liquid Crystal Display” and describes the active element of the display that is made from liquid crystals. In an LCD display the light source is located behind the panel and emits light from a rack of LEDs (Light Emitting Diodes), whereas earlier, manufacturers would use more bulky fluorescent lamps (CCFL).
It is true LCD technology got better, but it's been the same for at least 10 years now, I'm still using my Asus ROG PG279Q from 2015 (1440p IPS @ 165Hz) and not much has really changed in that time for LCD, Nothing that's worth upgrading to anyway.I would argue that steady incremental improvements have been incorporated into "LCD" displays.
Fast forward to now, and you can't give a gamer anything but, (at the very least), one of the new FAST, IPS panels. So, while improvement may indeed be incremental, it is very much in play with established panel technologies.