No and because no content for it even consoles are 4k 60 at best 4k 120 nobody wants to play 30 FPS anymore even if it’s 8k 30 FPS which consoles can’t do anyways
Absolute Zero I got a 4k HDR tv in 2018 with had inbuilt tv tuner turns out it wasn’t HDR at all but a 8bit+FRC which is akin to checkboarding vs native 4k in games that kinda idea... meaning fake HDR illusion (more than sdr color but less than HDR) Now the very next year Samsung brings in proper HDR tvs But then in 2020 we have HDR plus stable models Oh not to mention the tv I got was 2017 model not 2018 and I got it late 2018 Yes there was a bit of discount but a year later u get HDR tv for half the price and a year more later 2020 they seling HDR+ tv for slightly more than half the price I paid Which sucks because HDR+ with proper peak brightness of 1000 nits is always good
@@Thetechchap Question for the cost of that TV, will it provide total recall? Will I find Quato to start the reactor? Or is that S. Korean expensive made hunk of junk just good for watching Netflix and Amazon prime? Please advise.
@@LordCommandor the AI upscaling to 8K is second to none. Forget Netflix, streaming and use a good 4k blu ray or even 1080p blu ray disc and it will look amazing upscaled to 8K 👍🏾
Would've been great to have a side to side comparison to your lg 4k oled. And then do a blind test both showing some 8k footage with your parents or friends. I bet you they'd pick the OLED!
I'd get the 4K OLED when it comes down in price. I'm still using a FullHD TV from LG which still works, I won't be upgrading until it either breaks or a great deal pops up.
As a tech junkie, let's talk about the new 8k technology coming out. Myth: "YoUr eYeS cAnT eVeN SeE 4k" Truth: That is a half lie, half truth... That is someone trying to sell you the fact that your eyes cannot see over a certain amount of pixels for whatever reason. Hard to explain but basically your eyes use more than one technique to see something. That is where they get you. They don't explain that to you. You receive information such as Color, Depth, Sharpness, light, light reflections, etc. Those are enhanced the more pixels you add to an electronic light source (television). If you put a 1080p tv next to an 8K tv and tell me there is no difference, you are lying.
But at a certain distance you can’t see if something is sharper or not because ouer eyes are getting bad with age or not ? I can spot the difference between a 1080 or 1440p or 4K monitor but standing 2 meters away from a 65” tv I can’t spot a difference between 4 and 8k
Eyes can see 2 points if and only if they are separated by at least 1 arc minute which is 1/60th of a degree) so if you are sitting a mile away, you won't see the difference between 8k and 144p, as pixels will be closer than an arc minute in both scenarios. If you are sitting 2m away, pixels won't be closer than 1/60 of a degree in an 8K tv
I found that the maximum size TV you can use as a monitor in 4K to be about 44" due to the DPI reduction when going larger. This will be a missive step forward to cross that hurdle, but such TVs must also improve on the response time to 8ms and below, and having at least 4 inputs and able to do a user defined split screen arrangements per input (for instance show a 4K 60fps input per quarter of the screen). This will then enable you to effectively run 4 x 4K screens for productivity without the annoying bezels separating each.
Regarding the advantage of higher resolution when sitting away from the TV: I used to do large format photography. One of the things I really liked about it was that you felt you were really there and could go right up to the picture for seemingly unlimited detail. I think that the common guidelines of usable resolution underestimate that.
Tech Chap's dad: Look son, Ive brought you up, spent thousands of pounds and what have you ever done for me? Tech Chap: Can I put an 8K tv in your house?
Hi Tom. How did you get your 8K content from Note 20 to the TV? I have a 8K TV but don't know how to do it. Did you put it on your PC first or is there a way to stream it from your phone?
You will be able to tell the difference between a 55inch FHD and 4k TVs only if you are sitting closer than 1.8meters. If you want to be able to notice the difference between a 55inch 4k and 8k tv, you will have to sit about 0.8m from tv, thus not worth it for screen sizes below 65inch. This would be great for very very big TVs and 150inch projectors.
Other than few sources he mentioned video games using a very high end PC could make use of 8k resolutions at 60fps. But I don’t see broadcasters pushing even 4K content - regular old HD doesn’t need much bandwidth and looks fine and too few people care. Id guess 1080p HD will be the standard for decades no matter what TV companies try to sell us.
2010 ws the the year when we bought 40 inch full hd tv and there was hardly any hd channels at that time. we atrted experienceing HD channels in 2017 when we dump the local cable operator for national tata sky cabke provider. it took 5+ yrs to to becum HD cable commonly available
Hello, which is a better tv to buy? Best buy has 75inch 8k Samsung Q800T Model:QN75Q800TAFXZA and Lg Nanocell 99 series Model:75NANO99UNA 75inch? Thanks
I have an 55 inch 4K LG OLED and a friend of mine the 55 inch FHD LG OLED. Both of us with a distance of 3.5 meters from couch to TV. As German TV only broadcasts in 720p the older FHD makes the better image. If you play FHD footage both look the same. And if I compare 4K footage on both I cant see a difference as well. Maybe my eyes are not the best. But for me 8K has no additional value. And i am pretty sure that the 720p looks even worse in an 8K as on the 4K model.
You will be able to tell the difference between a 55inch FHD and 4k TVs only if you are sitting closer than 1.8meters. If you need to be able to notice the difference between 4k and 8k, you will have to sit about 0.8m from tv, thus not worth it for screen sizes below 65inch.
I got a 50" 4K Samsung display, and to me, there's definitely a difference from 720p to 1080p, from 1080p to 1440p, and from that last one to 4K. But I get what you're saying. 8K just doesn't worth it in these days.
4k video most often have much higher bitrate than 1080p tho and full hd tv's don't have hdr, which is a much bigger improvement in image quality than going from 1080p to 4k/uhd.
How come my Xbox won’t let me select 120hz with 4K? It says this tv doesn’t support it and defaults to 60hz. I even bought a 2.1 8k hdmi cable thinking that was the issue but still no luck. Please help!
Sound is so important for watching video content, and if you don't have money to buy some good speakers after you buy this tv, then buy something cheaper and get som speakers. But today its not even that expensive to get a good pair of speakers
How many nits of brightness does this model have? Does this tv vary in light vs dark room viewing quality? How would you describe the level of black produced on this nano99?
I have the 65” CX series and it’s amazing. I’m waiting for LG to release the 8K CX series before I get 8K. NanoCell is really nice but OLED has it beat.
What lamps are you using behind the tv? I´m thinking of buying a new tv because the Philips I have now is really a piece of shit. But I still like the Ambilight on the Philips Tvs. And yes I could ofc buy Philips Syncbox and a hue lightstrip but still find that a bit too expensive. I will probably buy a TV from LG this time and probably from the Nanocell series. Probably from 2021 series. But actually my question was about what lamps you use behind the tv. :p
This tv is the one I am thinking of getting in the 65 inch size. Please advise if you think this would be a good dark room viewing tv with excellent black peformance.
I'm kind of worried you didn't talk about regular Blu-ray upscaling quality, or even lower, dvd or vhs. How would those resolutions look like? Right now this tv sells for less than €2000 over here so it's a good buy I think. I wanted to buy a 4K in '23-'24 but now I'll take an 8K for around €2000 (which by then will be even better than this model). And REAL movie fans still buy discs, with streaming you only get the movie so no commentaries, makings-of, blooper reels, etc. If I really like a movie I want it on a disc (PS: I still have a 1080p tv so the jump to 8K will be ... interesting). [edit] aaand subbed. ;)
The model nano 956 is little cheaper, but it has only 60hz. Is it serious problem to play 1440 120fps and 4k 120fps? As I understand right I can play only 60hz with it?
Yes the contrast advantage over this nano IPS with such small dimming is very tiny and probably not noticable in a bright room. Recommendation choose whatever is cheaper .
There is a epic difference between the 4 and 8k tvs. The picture is much more rich and immersive. That being said I'm all about size and scaling. If the 90 had the 9 chipset there wouldn't be any question.
I think I would go for 4k OLED instead of 8k nano cell. I think I am right to do that but would you do the same? I think the question should be weather I would go for a 4k OLED or 4k nano cell and which gives me a better value especially since OLED has one durability risk
The “hot pixel” (always on, white) is a nice touch. It’s very visible at 4:24. I don’t mean to bash LG, as I’m viewing this on a 65” CX OLED, while being air conditioned by one of their dual inverter window units, but I’m surprised they didn’t inspect the TV before shipping it off for a review. Or, more alarmingly, they did... but it was damaged in transit. It’s worth noting that OLEDs really shine in dark rooms, where their perfect blacks and high contrast come to life. It’s a bit unfair looking for light leakage on an LCD in a brightly lit room... it would have to be a genuinely terrible TV for it to be obvious under those conditions.
There's an important piece of information you've missed from your video. With each new generation, there is always a new HDCP system. The new HDCP system hasn't been announced and it's very unlikely this can be added with a firmware update which makes any new 8K TV pointless for now. You would be unable to view 8K content on Sky or Virgin for example
had the same experience on first 4k models, ended up with HDCP 1.4 on HDMI 2.0(the only one that supported deep colour and could not use it at all) and HDCP 2.0 on the other less impressive HDMI 2.0 inputs
@@DavidSpencer77 yeah there are a lot of things that need to be in place first before even considering migrating to the next generation of TV. Usually when the Blu Ray standard is released, everything is in place. But annoyingly with 4K, they added Dolby Vision and HDR10+ after Blu Ray
Please review the dell inspiron 15 5505 with AMD ryzen 4500u or 4700u. I like the look of this laptop but I can't find any reviews of it online. I need to know how good the screen is and if there is thermal throttling.
Unless ur watching the handfull of youtube videos that are 8k or have an 8k camera then nothing you watch is actually gona be in 8k standard tv is still catching up to 4k and in some cases still catching upto 1080p hd. Anything more that 4k 60hz is overkill unless you are using it for a pc monitor.
Nice review! I hope you had spent more time talking about the inputs to the TV, so I can see if I can connect my beefy PC with RTX2080 or 2090 and do some desktop work, 8k would be great for that. No switching windows.
I'm guessing the dimming on the blacks would be more noticeable on a 4k than this 8k TV given 8K has 4x the pixels so IMO the 8K would make a better buy on that point alone.
So what puts a better picture this or Lg oleds GX ? I have a 65Gx in my bedroom but looking for a tv for my Lounge room. Do I go OLED4k, nanocell8k or Samsung’s Q900t 8k ?
The advantage of this TV is not its resolution but newer technologies and solutions that process the input. If I could buy this same TV at 4K resolution, it would just make more sense given available content on streaming services. However, gaming at 4k requires a powerful rig. The mere thought of gaming at 8K is just a misunderstanding. My TV also acts as a monitor, and at 4k the Windows 10 UI was just "undersized". The scaling option that Windows ten provides is good, but only for HiDPI aware applications. Still, scaled Windows desktop looks blurry. That is why I changed my 4k TV resolution to 1080, no scaling and no blurry effect, no matter what applications I run.
Hey chaps! Would you ever consider upgrading to 8K? (maybe next year?)
NOTE - at 4:45 - it's a bit of white fluff and not a stuck pixel! 👍
No and because no content for it even consoles are 4k 60 at best 4k 120 nobody wants to play 30 FPS anymore even if it’s 8k 30 FPS which consoles can’t do anyways
Absolute Zero dumb fellow so buy in future for lesser price na
Absolute Zero you don’t consider 8k until next decade
Absolute Zero it’s brand new consumer tech will be always kinks to solve
Absolute Zero I got a 4k HDR tv in 2018 with had inbuilt tv tuner turns out it wasn’t HDR at all but a 8bit+FRC which is akin to checkboarding vs native 4k in games that kinda idea... meaning fake HDR illusion (more than sdr color but less than HDR)
Now the very next year Samsung brings in proper HDR tvs
But then in 2020 we have HDR plus stable models
Oh not to mention the tv I got was 2017 model not 2018 and I got it late 2018
Yes there was a bit of discount but a year later u get HDR tv for half the price and a year more later 2020 they seling HDR+ tv for slightly more than half the price I paid
Which sucks because HDR+ with proper peak brightness of 1000 nits is always good
3:49 Correction :”Everything is Nano except the price”
Haha true
@@Thetechchap Question for the cost of that TV, will it provide total recall? Will I find Quato to start the reactor? Or is that S. Korean expensive made hunk of junk just good for watching Netflix and Amazon prime? Please advise.
@@LordCommandor the AI upscaling to 8K is second to none. Forget Netflix, streaming and use a good 4k blu ray or even 1080p blu ray disc and it will look amazing upscaled to 8K 👍🏾
@@C--AYou mean there are people still using discs? How ancient..
so true 😂
*Me watching on my average ips panel on 1080p resolution* : Wowwww That 8K Looks Gorgeous !!!
@2:59 Thought the pillar was real for a second.
My brain got confused a bit there as well. Thought he was outside and inside at the same time.
I was about to make the same comment.
Same here! Had to rewind.
Lol that got me too
Oh, I thought the same BUT unlike you, I kept watching not knowing it wasnt real :O ;O :D
5:04 That's a perfect sync!😂
Srinivas
Animal cruelty! 😒
Would've been great to have a side to side comparison to your lg 4k oled. And then do a blind test both showing some 8k footage with your parents or friends. I bet you they'd pick the OLED!
I'd get the 4K OLED when it comes down in price. I'm still using a FullHD TV from LG which still works, I won't be upgrading until it either breaks or a great deal pops up.
Last time I was this early my crt TV was amazing
Yeah I can't even imagine what we'll think of 8K in 20 years
DMoney Industry wtf😂
Sony Crt monitors can b really good
The 65nano95 8k is on special at bestbuy in Canada for $1599. It's the 2020 model but looks like a good buy.
I don't see any picture improvement over my current TV. Of course I'm watching on a 1987 cathode ray TV... 😂
Haha ghettoo
This thing looks so amazing with so much detail on my 1080P monitor!!!! Am I really missing anything here, except good content?!!
Oh for crying out loud. I DON'T need another TV. I don't, I don't, I don't...
I have a C6 OLED now and I’m getting this TV in a 65in! Can’t wait!
This looks great on my 4k monitor!! Let's face it, 8k is really only good for extra large(80''+) TV's.
I follow from Iraq, I love you so much, keep downloading beautiful videos❤️
As a tech junkie, let's talk about the new 8k technology coming out.
Myth: "YoUr eYeS cAnT eVeN SeE 4k"
Truth: That is a half lie, half truth... That is someone trying to sell you the fact that your eyes cannot see over a certain amount of pixels for whatever reason.
Hard to explain but basically your eyes use more than one technique to see something. That is where they get you. They don't explain that to you.
You receive information such as Color, Depth, Sharpness, light, light reflections, etc. Those are enhanced the more pixels you add to an electronic light source (television).
If you put a 1080p tv next to an 8K tv and tell me there is no difference, you are lying.
But at a certain distance you can’t see if something is sharper or not because ouer eyes are getting bad with age or not ? I can spot the difference between a 1080 or 1440p or 4K monitor but standing 2 meters away from a 65” tv I can’t spot a difference between 4 and 8k
YOUR EYES CAN SEE 4K AFTER DROPPING ACID ! 😂
Eyes can see 2 points if and only if they are separated by at least 1 arc minute which is 1/60th of a degree) so if you are sitting a mile away, you won't see the difference between 8k and 144p, as pixels will be closer than an arc minute in both scenarios. If you are sitting 2m away, pixels won't be closer than 1/60 of a degree in an 8K tv
Oh man those colours are outstanding
5:04 It's scared of you 😂
What better, 8k nano or oled 4k?
Short anwer: No
Long answer: Well, no not really
Haha sorta!
I recently invested in Samsung's Flagship 75" QLED 8K tv. We have both watched the same Mystery Box RUclips video 😃
How do you like the TV? I'm on the fence bc I can't see it anywhere in person. Are the blacks deep enough? Its this or the 77 inch CX
I found that the maximum size TV you can use as a monitor in 4K to be about 44" due to the DPI reduction when going larger. This will be a missive step forward to cross that hurdle, but such TVs must also improve on the response time to 8ms and below, and having at least 4 inputs and able to do a user defined split screen arrangements per input (for instance show a 4K 60fps input per quarter of the screen). This will then enable you to effectively run 4 x 4K screens for productivity without the annoying bezels separating each.
Regarding the advantage of higher resolution when sitting away from the TV: I used to do large format photography. One of the things I really liked about it was that you felt you were really there and could go right up to the picture for seemingly unlimited detail. I think that the common guidelines of usable resolution underestimate that.
far more detail in movies 4k lord of rings is amazing hard go back to 1080p
Zones? Peak brightness? Contrast ratio? Color volume??
Impossible to find the answer.....
If you get the smallest one the input latency is 11.6. I have a 49" version on my desktop and it is awesome goes with my 2080TI perfectly.
Tech Chap's dad: Look son, Ive brought you up, spent thousands of pounds and what have you ever done for me?
Tech Chap: Can I put an 8K tv in your house?
Haha this
Somehow, the picture quality just didn't seem as good as on the OLED's you've reviewed. Was this because of the recording equipment?
1:48 "Not sponsored by Pepsi" lol
Hi Tom. How did you get your 8K content from Note 20 to the TV? I have a 8K TV but don't know how to do it. Did you put it on your PC first or is there a way to stream it from your phone?
The footage from the tv from Tom's camera looks better the real life Tom on the same camera.
Thats when you know the TV is good
Great video, helped me make my mind up. But on the future proofing aspect, do you think we'll see 4k @ 120hz first or 8k @ 60hz?
It's not future proofing buying an 8k TV they will add newer things like hdr 100 etc 😂
That microscopic content is class 👌
You will be able to tell the difference between a 55inch FHD and 4k TVs only if you are sitting closer than 1.8meters. If you want to be able to notice the difference between a 55inch 4k and 8k tv, you will have to sit about 0.8m from tv, thus not worth it for screen sizes below 65inch. This would be great for very very big TVs and 150inch projectors.
Other than few sources he mentioned video games using a very high end PC could make use of 8k resolutions at 60fps. But I don’t see broadcasters pushing even 4K content - regular old HD doesn’t need much bandwidth and looks fine and too few people care. Id guess 1080p HD will be the standard for decades no matter what TV companies try to sell us.
true
2010 ws the the year when we bought 40 inch full hd tv and there was hardly any hd channels at that time. we atrted experienceing HD channels in 2017 when we dump the local cable operator for national tata sky cabke provider. it took 5+ yrs to to becum HD cable commonly available
Very informative. What is the war film used in the video? I want to watch it!
Are u happy with your sonos arc soundbar? Because i hear many complaints that it is not so good
Where's the review?, dude just read the marketing material
Would the 55" version do fine as a pc monitor?
Hey tech chap, which Is better the LG GX 77 4k or this LGNANO99 8k?
I just purchased this same t.v it's still 5000$ in Canada. 8k is very good and this review is 5 stars
Hello, which is a better tv to buy? Best buy has 75inch 8k Samsung Q800T
Model:QN75Q800TAFXZA and Lg Nanocell 99 series Model:75NANO99UNA
75inch? Thanks
I have an 55 inch 4K LG OLED and a friend of mine the 55 inch FHD LG OLED. Both of us with a distance of 3.5 meters from couch to TV. As German TV only broadcasts in 720p the older FHD makes the better image. If you play FHD footage both look the same. And if I compare 4K footage on both I cant see a difference as well. Maybe my eyes are not the best. But for me 8K has no additional value. And i am pretty sure that the 720p looks even worse in an 8K as on the 4K model.
You will be able to tell the difference between a 55inch FHD and 4k TVs only if you are sitting closer than 1.8meters. If you need to be able to notice the difference between 4k and 8k, you will have to sit about 0.8m from tv, thus not worth it for screen sizes below 65inch.
I got a 50" 4K Samsung display, and to me, there's definitely a difference from 720p to 1080p, from 1080p to 1440p, and from that last one to 4K.
But I get what you're saying. 8K just doesn't worth it in these days.
4k video most often have much higher bitrate than 1080p tho and full hd tv's don't have hdr, which is a much bigger improvement in image quality than going from 1080p to 4k/uhd.
How come my Xbox won’t let me select 120hz with 4K? It says this tv doesn’t support it and defaults to 60hz. I even bought a 2.1 8k hdmi cable thinking that was the issue but still no luck. Please help!
at 2:58 I really thought there was a chimney infront of the camera.
What camera are you using to film this ? 2K?
Will it make more of a difference on the ps5??
What is the difference between this and the NANO95? Just the size or?
Sound is so important for watching video content, and if you don't have money to buy some good speakers after you buy this tv, then buy something cheaper and get som speakers. But today its not even that expensive to get a good pair of speakers
Definitely!
Cinehub pro and it has earc thx certified also with wireless 5.1 surround sound for $1,500 US oh yeah the brand is enclave
How many nits of brightness does this model have? Does this tv vary in light vs dark room viewing quality?
How would you describe the level of black produced on this nano99?
What was that microscope? Please. If you don't mind.
Really good video! Swaying a little towards this over the 77CX. Hard to choose when options are limited for seeing them in person.
I have the 65” CX series and it’s amazing. I’m waiting for LG to release the 8K CX series before I get 8K. NanoCell is really nice but OLED has it beat.
Is the Nanocell 95 still future proof if you want to game on the next-gen consoles?
Is that a Sonos Arc soundbar you have connected to your LG GX TV? If so , would love to see a video review of the soundbar
I think I'll keep my massive projection TV from 18 years ago.
@@GarethColquhoun Are they unreliable? I'm getting a little concerned now...
What lamps are you using behind the tv? I´m thinking of buying a new tv because the Philips I have now is really a piece of shit. But I still like the Ambilight on the Philips Tvs. And yes I could ofc buy Philips Syncbox and a hue lightstrip but still find that a bit too expensive. I will probably buy a TV from LG this time and probably from the Nanocell series. Probably from 2021 series. But actually my question was about what lamps you use behind the tv. :p
I'd rather have a 43" 4K OLED that could be used as a kick ass computer monitor!
hard to understand why they don't make 43 inch OLEDs.
@@georgepopescu1327 how is that hard, people that buys high-end tv's usually go 55+
@@Dr.WhetFarts but gamers do buy smaller displays and a gamer is a much better cow to milk than any other consummer out there.
LG CX 48 is great for a monitor / tv
@@User9681e its hard to find and grossly overpriced right now.
Hi pal which hdmi cable do you have for your 8k tv?
This tv is the one I am thinking of getting in the 65 inch size. Please advise if you think this would be a good dark room viewing tv with excellent black peformance.
Great video as always Tech Chap! Hey do you have a data cap from your ISP over there in the UK? Here in the US it’s very common to have data caps!
No, we don't.
@Mark Dee. There aren’t any internet data caps from ISP’s in the U.K. at all whatsoever? There has to be some?
Is this tv way better than the XH90 ? I need your help !
At just 75inch now is it still viable to go 8k? Sure maybe if you’re closer than 2m to the screen?
I've seen a 4k tv screen in stores on display and they look fantastic. How much clearer can it possibly get?
I'm kind of worried you didn't talk about regular Blu-ray upscaling quality, or even lower, dvd or vhs. How would those resolutions look like? Right now this tv sells for less than €2000 over here so it's a good buy I think. I wanted to buy a 4K in '23-'24 but now I'll take an 8K for around €2000 (which by then will be even better than this model). And REAL movie fans still buy discs, with streaming you only get the movie so no commentaries, makings-of, blooper reels, etc. If I really like a movie I want it on a disc (PS: I still have a 1080p tv so the jump to 8K will be ... interesting). [edit] aaand subbed. ;)
The model nano 956 is little cheaper, but it has only 60hz. Is it serious problem to play 1440 120fps and 4k 120fps? As I understand right I can play only 60hz with it?
I could consider this because I have a really bright room. Would you choose this instead of OLED if your livingroom is super bright?
Yes the contrast advantage over this nano IPS with such small dimming is very tiny and probably not noticable in a bright room.
Recommendation choose whatever is cheaper .
The question is what would you run on it .
great question - i talk about that about half way through the video :)
There is a epic difference between the 4 and 8k tvs. The picture is much more rich and immersive. That being said I'm all about size and scaling. If the 90 had the 9 chipset there wouldn't be any question.
8K will get there eventually but it will most likely take 5 more years before there's a decent amount of content
I think I would go for 4k OLED instead of 8k nano cell. I think I am right to do that but would you do the same? I think the question should be weather I would go for a 4k OLED or 4k nano cell and which gives me a better value especially since OLED has one durability risk
I hope this makes 4K TV's cheaper, so finally we can upgrade our 720p TV to a 1080p one
Are black levels good?
Yep!
What do u suggest thid or samsung
The “hot pixel” (always on, white) is a nice touch. It’s very visible at 4:24.
I don’t mean to bash LG, as I’m viewing this on a 65” CX OLED, while being air conditioned by one of their dual inverter window units, but I’m surprised they didn’t inspect the TV before shipping it off for a review. Or, more alarmingly, they did... but it was damaged in transit.
It’s worth noting that OLEDs really shine in dark rooms, where their perfect blacks and high contrast come to life. It’s a bit unfair looking for light leakage on an LCD in a brightly lit room... it would have to be a genuinely terrible TV for it to be obvious under those conditions.
There's an important piece of information you've missed from your video. With each new generation, there is always a new HDCP system. The new HDCP system hasn't been announced and it's very unlikely this can be added with a firmware update which makes any new 8K TV pointless for now. You would be unable to view 8K content on Sky or Virgin for example
had the same experience on first 4k models, ended up with HDCP 1.4 on HDMI 2.0(the only one that supported deep colour and could not use it at all) and HDCP 2.0 on the other less impressive HDMI 2.0 inputs
@@DavidSpencer77 yeah there are a lot of things that need to be in place first before even considering migrating to the next generation of TV. Usually when the Blu Ray standard is released, everything is in place. But annoyingly with 4K, they added Dolby Vision and HDR10+ after Blu Ray
Please review the dell inspiron 15 5505 with AMD ryzen 4500u or 4700u. I like the look of this laptop but I can't find any reviews of it online. I need to know how good the screen is and if there is thermal throttling.
Unless ur watching the handfull of youtube videos that are 8k or have an 8k camera then nothing you watch is actually gona be in 8k standard tv is still catching up to 4k and in some cases still catching upto 1080p hd. Anything more that 4k 60hz is overkill unless you are using it for a pc monitor.
Im wondering if I should buy 65 inch one for 1.5k
u should have used it as your monitor will any gpu will be able to handle this??
I'm debating whether to get a 4k tv or keep my 1080p tv not a 8k tv. But it's a pretty good tv for gaming.
4k oled all the way
Member when you didn't have to worry about your television LEARNING from the things you watch in it?
Can I ask please, will this TV suffer the same light Bleed as LG LCD TV,s.
Is this an equivalent size to 4 x 37" tv's/monitors @ 4K?
I think I’m going to get this tv it’s stunning
Don't, there are many that are MUCH better than this
What is the response time on this tv in and out of gaming mode? I might’ve missed it in the video but I can’t find it anywhere
if i want all these features but in a 55-65" 4K TV which model should I buy? Something cheaper than oled.
sm9000 2019 models
How does this compare to the Samsung 75" Q95t/q90t
Nice review! I hope you had spent more time talking about the inputs to the TV, so I can see if I can connect my beefy PC with RTX2080 or 2090 and do some desktop work, 8k would be great for that. No switching windows.
So you can keep this?
Hello tom can u review tcl 4k 120hz tv love ur content
what's your picture settings ?
I'm guessing the dimming on the blacks would be more noticeable on a 4k than this 8k TV given 8K has 4x the pixels so IMO the 8K would make a better buy on that point alone.
Does this tv have the ambilight or is this stick on add on?
Wonderful colours and outstanding texture
Here I am watching a video about 8k on 1080p s AMOLED display @ 480p due to RUclips restrictions on mobile data 😅
9:39 Plz can u tell where did u get this footage from?? Some youtube channel??
Yes, it was indeed a RUclips 8K video. I've seen that particular one. Just search for '8K videos'
The TV is 1/5 of the price of the top spec one but still 3 times the cost of my car!
So what puts a better picture this or Lg oleds GX ? I have a 65Gx in my bedroom but looking for a tv for my Lounge room. Do I go OLED4k, nanocell8k or Samsung’s Q900t 8k ?
Wow wish i had your first world problems.
They're so hard to resolve.
I'd like the challenge.
LG 75Nano99 vs LG OLED 65CX?
Does the AI upscaling work for the hdmi output
The advantage of this TV is not its resolution but newer technologies and solutions that process the input. If I could buy this same TV at 4K resolution, it would just make more sense given available content on streaming services. However, gaming at 4k requires a powerful rig. The mere thought of gaming at 8K is just a misunderstanding. My TV also acts as a monitor, and at 4k the Windows 10 UI was just "undersized". The scaling option that Windows ten provides is good, but only for HiDPI aware applications. Still, scaled Windows desktop looks blurry. That is why I changed my 4k TV resolution to 1080, no scaling and no blurry effect, no matter what applications I run.