Great video. OLED burn in is something that has me hesitant to buy a new monitor, but I also want to experience true HDR when watching content or playing games. MicroLED looks like the endgame for display technology at the moment.
True no matter how incredible OLED is, that burn in keeps lingering in the back of my mind. Do note that the images shown are all extreme cases. QD OLEDs are extremely resistent to burn in. MicroLED is truely the endgame.
I've been waiting a long time for micro led, but I still think we will be waiting for the consumer market. I want a 75 or 85-inch. I will settle for oled tech for now.
I love OLED, but i'm still excited for MicroLED TV especially since the burn in won't be a problem in that tech especially for live tv. I'm personally not worried about burn in in OLED as i use it for streaming, movies, and gaming.
I agree that MicroLED television are the future, I just hope it's the near future rather than the far future. I've been saving to buy one for what seems like forever now, I even been saving to purchase one one day. I can't hardly wait because my old television are starting to show there age but I know it will be worth the wait. Thank's for sharing the latest news...👍
I would not wait if I were you. Samsung managed to shrink their MicroLEDs very fast but I suspect it will take at least 4-5 years until they are somewhat in a pricerange where normal people can afford them. And with that I mean prices of
Hey bro came from your other channel. Very informative video. Never knew such things before as I always know oled was better since cost is high. I have a question which is unrelated, do you know what type display is used in lenovo ideapad 3? Just curious to know about it.
Lower end IPS bro (Note that Display manufacturers other than LG , refer to their IPS panels as WVA/PLS TFT/"IPS-Type", as IPS is LG's intellectual property).
Nice explanation and examples. 24 million microleds in 4K for the RGB, it sounds better. :D Also you have way to bright light on you, you constantly have to blink because of it. If you plan to use similar setup in the future put it higher, make it bigger (with someting like a blanket to make the light softer) and if you want the reflection in your eyes put something less bright.
Debateable. But OLEDs provide the best of the best image quality without any caveats. But it's expensive. There is no perfect technology yet. So buy depending on your budget.
OLED is here to stay whether you like it or not, there no way in h*ll manufacturers are gonna throw away multi billion dollar worth of equipment, OLED has also improved massively and is in almost everything today, the largest volumes of OLED are actually in cars now, from OLED lights to OLED displays inside cars. The biggest hurdle of MicroLED is to shrink the pixels small enough so that the panels can be useful for anything other than super large TV's as they are currently aimed at. However when this is achieved, MicroLED will be the cheapest form of panels that are manufactured, for they have 4 layers versus the 6 or 8 layers of OLED meaning your printers need to be less complex to do the same job, also means printers can be smaller in size allowing small scale manufacturing. MicroLED is not new technology by any means, its grandfather, SED which was basically CRT but shrunk to micro scale allowing pixels to be each made up of a single cathode, these TV's reportedly performed extremely well but suffered from awful contrast levels and eventually abandoned by Canon the inventor.
@@exoticcar5482 OLED burn in issues have been debunked for 6 years now, you literally have to leave the TV running on a sports channel 24/7 for an entire year to obtain burn in level thats significant enough. LED also have burn in problems by the way, not as severe but they actually do occur on gaming monitors after 5 - 7 years, I had several laptops developing these issues. The burn in problems with OLED are down to its organic nature, MicroLED wont have them but MicroLED has its own issues to deal with. OLED is just cheaper to manufacture than LED, the problem is majority of OLED production plants are either for tiny phone screens or large TV's like LG is doing. But they started shrinking them for laptops, and for equal quality IPS LED, you end up paying more in manufacture cost for LED than the OLED and receive inferior quality screen with far more issues, anyone who worked in panel production will understand the titanic work that goes into correcting all the problems LED have after leaving the production, it needs heavily correction and has backlight bleeding thats still impossible to get rid of even today.
@@SMGJohn That maybe the case for TVs, but for other applications like smartphones, computer monitors, basic information displays, etc. OLED burn in seems to still be an issue at least since after 2016. My Galaxy s8 was made in 2018 and me using it for that long has caused burn in from my favorite apps and the status bar. My last phone before that I had for that same time period and while it was much worse overall than the s8, it still didn't have any burn in since the screen was LCD. When you say OLED is cheaper than LED, what are you referring to by LED? OLED is still considerably more expensive than generic LED backlit LCD (often marketed as an ''LED display'' though not a real LED display). Maybe you're talking about mini LED, and that I can agree on. It solves one problem but creates others.
@@exoticcar5482 OLED having shorter life span is preferable for manufacturers since it will shorten the life span of the device its put into forcing the consumer to buy again. And no thats not bullshit, thats really how business work, you cannot make money when everyone stops buying your products because they last so long. OLED is cheaper than LED in that it require less resources to manufacture, just because panels costs more than LED is not really OLED being more expensive, but rather the fact LED manufacturing is so competitive and so advanced already that factories can produce LED at extremely low cost, however LED panels are more complex and requires backlight panels, in essence, more resources are required for LED than resources for OLED. For manufacturers, OLED is cheaper, for consumer maybe not so much but in phones OLED panels are already cheaper by bulk than LED are for purchase hence why everyone has an OLED screen these days even the low cost ones. TV's not so much since there only 2 manufacturers actually making OLED screens larger than 13 inches.
You are awesome bro ..I love your content can you compare iphone vs Samsung s20fe 5g which is more practical in use and try to do Samsung underrated features like modes and routines ,pro mode samples ,
Great video. OLED burn in is something that has me hesitant to buy a new monitor, but I also want to experience true HDR when watching content or playing games. MicroLED looks like the endgame for display technology at the moment.
True no matter how incredible OLED is, that burn in keeps lingering in the back of my mind. Do note that the images shown are all extreme cases.
QD OLEDs are extremely resistent to burn in.
MicroLED is truely the endgame.
I've been waiting a long time for micro led, but I still think we will be waiting for the consumer market. I want a 75 or 85-inch. I will settle for oled tech for now.
Micro LED is probably the end game of display technology lol. Literally absolutely all the benefits with no compromise.
Great content. Cheers!!
I love OLED, but i'm still excited for MicroLED TV especially since the burn in won't be a problem in that tech especially for live tv. I'm personally not worried about burn in in OLED as i use it for streaming, movies, and gaming.
Really helpful, thanks. I didn't know about the sustained brightness problem with OLEDs
I agree that MicroLED television are the future, I just hope it's the near future rather than the far future. I've been saving to buy one for what seems like forever now, I even been saving to purchase one one day. I can't hardly wait because my old television are starting to show there age but I know it will be worth the wait. Thank's for sharing the latest news...👍
Ahh, perhaps you can buy a Samsung S95B for now :P
I would not wait if I were you.
Samsung managed to shrink their MicroLEDs very fast but I suspect it will take at least 4-5 years until they are somewhat in a pricerange where normal people can afford them.
And with that I mean prices of
Very exhaustive analysis, thanks a lot! Hopefully micro led will get more affordable soon.
Carry on Bro
Subscribed
Hey bro came from your other channel. Very informative video. Never knew such things before as I always know oled was better since cost is high.
I have a question which is unrelated, do you know what type display is used in lenovo ideapad 3? Just curious to know about it.
Lower end IPS bro (Note that Display manufacturers other than LG , refer to their IPS panels as WVA/PLS TFT/"IPS-Type", as IPS is LG's intellectual property).
Awesome knowledge ,gained
Amazing:)
Nice explanation and examples.
24 million microleds in 4K for the RGB, it sounds better. :D
Also you have way to bright light on you, you constantly have to blink because of it.
If you plan to use similar setup in the future put it higher, make it bigger (with someting like a blanket to make the light softer) and if you want the reflection in your eyes put something less bright.
What current tech is the best for a monitor? I'm mostly gonna use it for coding and film watching.
Debateable. But OLEDs provide the best of the best image quality without any caveats.
But it's expensive.
There is no perfect technology yet.
So buy depending on your budget.
OLED is here to stay whether you like it or not, there no way in h*ll manufacturers are gonna throw away multi billion dollar worth of equipment, OLED has also improved massively and is in almost everything today, the largest volumes of OLED are actually in cars now, from OLED lights to OLED displays inside cars.
The biggest hurdle of MicroLED is to shrink the pixels small enough so that the panels can be useful for anything other than super large TV's as they are currently aimed at.
However when this is achieved, MicroLED will be the cheapest form of panels that are manufactured, for they have 4 layers versus the 6 or 8 layers of OLED meaning your printers need to be less complex to do the same job, also means printers can be smaller in size allowing small scale manufacturing.
MicroLED is not new technology by any means, its grandfather, SED which was basically CRT but shrunk to micro scale allowing pixels to be each made up of a single cathode, these TV's reportedly performed extremely well but suffered from awful contrast levels and eventually abandoned by Canon the inventor.
I won't have a problem with OLED's sticking around if we get around this burn in issue.
@@exoticcar5482
OLED burn in issues have been debunked for 6 years now, you literally have to leave the TV running on a sports channel 24/7 for an entire year to obtain burn in level thats significant enough.
LED also have burn in problems by the way, not as severe but they actually do occur on gaming monitors after 5 - 7 years, I had several laptops developing these issues.
The burn in problems with OLED are down to its organic nature, MicroLED wont have them but MicroLED has its own issues to deal with.
OLED is just cheaper to manufacture than LED, the problem is majority of OLED production plants are either for tiny phone screens or large TV's like LG is doing.
But they started shrinking them for laptops, and for equal quality IPS LED, you end up paying more in manufacture cost for LED than the OLED and receive inferior quality screen with far more issues, anyone who worked in panel production will understand the titanic work that goes into correcting all the problems LED have after leaving the production, it needs heavily correction and has backlight bleeding thats still impossible to get rid of even today.
@@SMGJohn That maybe the case for TVs, but for other applications like smartphones, computer monitors, basic information displays, etc. OLED burn in seems to still be an issue at least since after 2016. My Galaxy s8 was made in 2018 and me using it for that long has caused burn in from my favorite apps and the status bar. My last phone before that I had for that same time period and while it was much worse overall than the s8, it still didn't have any burn in since the screen was LCD. When you say OLED is cheaper than LED, what are you referring to by LED? OLED is still considerably more expensive than generic LED backlit LCD (often marketed as an ''LED display'' though not a real LED display). Maybe you're talking about mini LED, and that I can agree on. It solves one problem but creates others.
@@exoticcar5482
OLED having shorter life span is preferable for manufacturers since it will shorten the life span of the device its put into forcing the consumer to buy again.
And no thats not bullshit, thats really how business work, you cannot make money when everyone stops buying your products because they last so long.
OLED is cheaper than LED in that it require less resources to manufacture, just because panels costs more than LED is not really OLED being more expensive, but rather the fact LED manufacturing is so competitive and so advanced already that factories can produce LED at extremely low cost, however LED panels are more complex and requires backlight panels, in essence, more resources are required for LED than resources for OLED.
For manufacturers, OLED is cheaper, for consumer maybe not so much but in phones OLED panels are already cheaper by bulk than LED are for purchase hence why everyone has an OLED screen these days even the low cost ones.
TV's not so much since there only 2 manufacturers actually making OLED screens larger than 13 inches.
You are awesome bro ..I love your content can you compare iphone vs Samsung s20fe 5g which is more practical in use and try to do Samsung underrated features like modes and routines ,pro mode samples ,
Thank you so much :)
A 4k micro LED tv will have 24.8 million LEDs. Each Pixel has 3 subpixels. A red, green and blue led.
Brother please do what's on my phone ft. Samsung S20 FE video. Btw really love to see ur vids 😁🫡
Thanks for the idea!