Google · Stripe · Apple · Intel · Samsung · Donald Trump · The Verge
Quantum dot TVs overtook RGB LED TVs, confirms the firm that makes QDs for TVs
Compiled by KHAO Editorial — aggregated from 1 source + 4 references discovered via search. See llms.txt for citation guidance.
◌ Single Source
A side-by-side comparison of an RGB LED TV and a QD TV showed color crosstalk and contrast issues in the RGB LED TV.
Key facts
- At the Los Angeles Convention Center, two 85-inch TVs sat side by side inside the Nanosys meeting room at Display Week, a yearly business-to-business convention focusing on the technology that goes
- A side-by-side comparison of an RGB LED TV and a QD TV showed color crosstalk and contrast issues in the RGB LED TV
- One TV was a mini-LED panel with super quantum dots, and the other was an RGB LED, this year’s hottest TV trend
- The TV on the right, with the Nanosys super quantum dots, was labeled as the TCL X11L, the striped lower grille confirming as much, and the other was most likely the TCL RM9L
Summary
At the Los Angeles Convention Center, two 85-inch TVs sat side by side inside the Nanosys meeting room at Display Week, a yearly business-to-business convention focusing on the technology that goes into displays of all types. The reporter should probably mention that Nanosys made the quantum dots in the first TV. The TV on the right, with the Nanosys super quantum dots, was labeled as the TCL X11L, the striped lower grille confirming as much, and the other was most likely the TCL RM9L. As a quick refresher, RGB LED TVs use red, green, and blue LEDs grouped into zones to create a colored backlight based on the image displayed on screen.