With so many potential advantages to Hisense's new mini LED RGB tech, the future of TV may be taking shape right in front of ...
OLED is different because it doesn't use an LED backlight to produce light. Instead, light is produced by millions of individual OLED subpixels. The pixels themselves -- tiny dots that compose the ...
QD-OLED – or quantum dot organic light-emitting diode – is a TV display tech that merges the best aspects of OLED and quantum dot LED (QLED) displays. OLED screens use organic compounds that ...
OLEDs are emissive whereas QLEDs (and LCD TVs before them) are transmissive. OLED TVs use pixels that emit their own light, but QLED TVs must rely on LED backlighting to ignite the on-screen pixels.
When comparing QLED versus OLED, both options have pros and cons ... Like other LCD TVs, these displays rely on LED (light-emitting diode) backlights to illuminate their picture since each ...
OLED TVs use pixels that emit their own light, but QLED TVs must rely on LED backlighting to ignite the on-screen pixels. The structure of these OLED panels varies across manufacturers.