Jezzer
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Yes, thereās definitely a chuckle or two to be had with his videos.Plus he's hilarious (if you like that kind of humour of course )
I need to catch up on his videos, haven't watched any for nearly a year now.
Yes, thereās definitely a chuckle or two to be had with his videos.Plus he's hilarious (if you like that kind of humour of course )
I need to catch up on his videos, haven't watched any for nearly a year now.
I wrote "mini LED", and you explained "micro LED". We are both correct, because these are different things.Almost correct.
MicroLED is a purely emissive technology just like OLED (QD-OLED being a variant of OLED obviously) based panels. So there are two technologies that "forms an image using light emitting diodes".
The MicroLED Handbook
Check out this MircoLED Handbook that covers all you need to know about the technology!www.psco.co.uk
Also, I've never personally had much of a problem with my OLED (or the Plasma previously for that matter) in daylight conditions. Except when the sun is literally shining through the window to my seating position (which it does frequently in winter as the sun is low and the window south facing). Of course a lot depends on your tolerance and expectation for how bright you need your TV to be. Ironically, I often find LED TVs not very watchable in brighter conditions as their contrast is so poor and so even though the pcture is bright it's washed out*. I'd rather watch a dimmer but more "punchy" picture personally.
*To be fair I don't really have experience of the top end of the LED market, so my comment pertains to the cheaper end LED TVs.
My comment was intended to be in addition to your post, not a replacement for any part of it. I wasn't sure if you just weren't aware of microLED or didn't realise it was self emissive. I should have been clearer about that in my post.I wrote "mini LED", and you explained "micro LED". We are both correct, because these are different things.
I didn't realise Micro LED had reached consumer products, but Samsung now offer a 75-inch set, which is just small enough to count as domestic use.