To be clear, Samsung's Micro RGB TV is not a Micro LED display. During Samsung's presentation, a representative described the TV as sitting "squarely in between" Mini LED and Micro LED.
Samsung’s massive, in both price and size, micro-RGB TV is barely two weeks old, but it’s making waves for those two factors as well as the promised visual quality. The 115-inch Micro RGB Samsung ...
Samsung unveils the production version of their 115-inch RGB LED-backlit LCD TV for the low, low price of $29,999. At CES, Samsung showed off a new LCD TV prototype they’re referring to as “Micro RGB.
I've tested a lot of TVs, and I think RGB backlight systems could be what moves display quality forward. I've seen two models ...
I got to spend a couple of hours by myself with Samsung’s first TV to use Micro RGB technology – and I’ve never seen anything ...
Samsung's first RGB micro-LED TV will be 115 inches It may be the only model this year, although smaller models will follow The tech is also due this year from Hisense Samsung's next TV is a big deal: ...
Forward-looking: Another TV has been unveiled at CES that is expected to be as technologically stunning as it is expensive – extremely. Samsung is showing off a prototype 98-inch LCD 8K television ...
After years of the TV world largely focusing on upgrades on more or less the same core OLED and LCD screen technologies, we seem to be entering a new era of genuine TV hardware innovation. This year ...
Last week, Samsung announced the world's first Micro RGB TV and while it sounded fantastic on paper, you can never really get a good sense of what a fresh display looks like until you see it in person ...
Samsung teased a fresh take on backlit premium televisions at CES in January, with a 98-inch 8K LCD TV prototype featuring RGB microLED technology. Now the company has gone into production with a ...
The 115-inch TV is debuting in South Korea for over $32,000, but Samsung plans to bring it to the US. The 115-inch TV is debuting in South Korea for over $32,000, but Samsung plans to bring it to the ...
Too Big for Your Wallet: TV makers keep developing new technologies to improve color accuracy and brightness, even on the largest screens. One popular approach focuses on extremely tiny backlight ...