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Monday, January 6, 2020

What is OLED?!


OLED is a television technology that's being used in the best-looking TVs we've seen today but how does the tech differ from regular TVs? And what do you need to know?



 OLED televisions produce their images via a different technological process to other kinds of TVs and we at cent’s have been very fond of the results with the first OLED TV reviewed producing the best picture quality  ever seen But to understand what makes OLED different you first need to know how pictures are created in.
                                        

LCD TV which is the technology in common ?


 Today at the back of LCD TVs. There's a back light which shines light through liquid crystals which act a bit like shutters either allowing light through or not depending on the current that's run through them red green and blue color filters put over the top makeup an individual tiny on screen pixel capable of producing any color contributing to an overall visible picture on the screen are LED uses that same color combining principle, but the big difference is that there's no backlight. Right instead light is generated by organic compounds that glow. When a current is applied.
 Some OLED designs including one favored by LG use white OLED overlaid with red green and blue filters, but the common trait is that OLED displays don't need a backlight.

 So why the better picture ?

 it's because each pixel can be shut off when there's no current flowing the pixel appears completely black this extremely high contrast between light and dark makes for lovely image and we found beats the picture quality on sets that use backlight even though TV makers. Found clever ways to dim backlights in LCD TVs to make Parts of the screen as black as possible.
OLED screens can also be made very thin and have wide viewing angles and the tech can also be put to use in bending or transparent displays. All that is yet to go mainstream. and there aren't many TV makers using this technology. Plus it remains very expensive. So I will let's commercial future is uncertain but having been deeply impressed with TVs that use it. We certainly hope we see cheaper sets at a range of prices in years to come that should be all you need to know for an introduction to old.

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