Sunday, February 6, 2011

Organic LED and the Future of Television

Sony has its first Organic LED (OLED) TV to market and the product is amazing. The image quality is also unmatched by today's standards. In this episode we show you the 3-mm thin screen for one day replace plasma and LCD TV. DigitalJournal.com as reported in early February, Sony is coming a new era in television with OLED TV. OLED is composed of small pieces of organic material that glow when an electric current is applied (so-called electrophosphorescence). Ifused to create displays, OLED screens can produce self-luminous in the sense that they do not need a light source, such as LCD or DLP televisions. Sony's first OLED, the XEL-1, and the picture quality is better than anything we've seen in today's technology today. The screen is 3 mm thick (the thickness of three credit cards), it consumes almost no power (from 35W), the picture quality is vivid and sharp, and the contrast ratio of 1,000,000:1 is a surprising, that its black levels are great. Inthis episode of Digital Journal TV, we give you a first look at Sony's 11-inch XEL-1, and discuss the advantages and disadvantages of this new TV technology. There is a long list of advantages, but we also found a couple of setbacks, and look at what Sony is planning to invest for the future of television.

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