
"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. One TV was a mini-LED panel with super quantum dots, and the other was an RGB LED - this year's hottest TV trend. Both TVs were showing the same content at the same time to highlight the differences between the two technologies - or more specifically, to show the potential failings of RGB LED backlights when compared to super quantum dot (SQD), which uses blue LEDs for the backlight."
"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. Nanosys wouldn't confirm as much, but I've seen the RGB LED TVs from Hisense, Samsung, LG, and Sony in person, and it wasn't any of those. Jeff Yurek, vice president of marketing at Nanosys, informed me that both"
Two 85-inch TVs were displayed side by side at Display Week in the Nanosys meeting room, showing identical content to compare display technologies. One TV used a mini-LED panel with super quantum dots, while the other used an RGB LED backlight approach. The comparison aimed to demonstrate potential shortcomings of RGB LED backlights relative to super quantum dot (SQD) technology. SQD uses blue LEDs for the backlight, while RGB LED systems rely on red, green, and blue light generation. The RGB LED TV exhibited color crosstalk and contrast issues during the simultaneous viewing, while the SQD mini-LED TV performed better under the same conditions. The TVs were identified as TCL models, with the SQD set confirmed to use Nanosys quantum dots.
Read at The Verge
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