Quote:
Originally Posted by stumped
but do actual OLED tablets exist, given that the smallest OLED TV you can buy is 55 inches
( with 48 inch " coming soon" )
https://www.whathifi.com/us/news/you...8-inch-oled-tv
I know Samsung offer AMOLED but is that the same technology
( not quite says Quora)
https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-di...its-advantages
seems strange if so, that you can have 10 inch, you can have 55+ but you cant have anything in between ?
for the record, I used a samsung S1 10 inch amoled tablet for a couple of years before switching to Lenovo & Huawei. I can't say that i ever noticed any real difference between AMOLED , LCD, TFT, IPS etc in my 10 inch devices; and I do read in the dark, but not on super-dimmed
the type of screen tech would be way down my list of must have features. I'd want high ppi, 32GB or more storage, latest android, full HD support for streaming video from all sources, high quality audio, large battery capacity... before getting to that
|
I would think for the purpose of achieving true dark AMOLED and OLED are the same.
To see a difference between LCD and any kind of LED without LCD in front of it, adjust text on both to be the same brightness on both and look at an all black image on both on a dark room. The LCD will be gray, the *LED will be black.
LG TVs use WRGB OLED, that is each of the 4 sub-pixels is white and 3 of them have a red, green, or blue passive filter in front. LG sells all the 55" and 65" panels they can produce. Smaller panels can not be cut from their current production sheets without wasting material. A new plant will be coming online which should enable smaller TV screens.
Samsung has years of experience making AMOLED for phones. The problem is that AMOLED can not be scaled to large screens, not that TV OLED screens can not be made smaller.