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Twinsies Dual-LCD adds a second LC layer, essentially like having two TVs sharing one backlight. Another slice of meat in the LCD TV sandwich, as CNET's David Katzmaier wrote in his dual-LCD preview.
Shopping for a TV can get confusing. Two types you'll encounter are QLED (quantum dot LED – LCD TV with LED backlight and quantum dot layer) and OLED (organic LED or organic electro-luminescence ...
The LCD TV has a lot of layers. There’s a diffuser, a polarizer, a color filter, and lately a quantum-dot layer.
Dual-cell means there the display panel is outfitted with second LCD layer acting as an array backlight filter for the primary LCD layer. It’s said to rival the blacks of OLED, but at a ...
LCD TVs work by having a light behind the pixels shining forward. The LCD layer of liquid crystals changes this light into other colors, so it looks like what it's supposed to.
Hisense will release a 65-inch dual-layer LCD TV in the third quarter of 2020 to the US market and says the price will be lower than that of a comparable OLED TV -- for reference LG's 65-inch B9 ...
As the LED blacklight goes through the B&W LCD layer, it functions like 2-million local dimming zones, far more than on any LCD TV to date, providing very accurate control of bright and dark objects ...
In addition to a previously announced plan to invest $11 billion in QD-OLED production, at least one of the LCD lines in Korea will be converted to manufacture quantum dot-enhanced OLED panels ...
Also called a "thin film transistor LCD" (TFT LCD), a thin layer of transistors is deposited on the back of the screen (see amorphous silicon). Active matrix uses TN liquid crystals with a 90º twist.
Unlike its LCD and QLED brethren, OLED TVs utilizes self-emissive pixels. When electricity passes through these pixels, which number in the millions in these TVs, they light up in different colors.
See LCD, LCD subpixels and LCD types. Reflective LCD A reflective LCD uses the ambient light in the vicinity. The light passes through the LCD layer to a mirror, which reflects it back to the viewer.
TCL’s panel manufacturing arm is cooking up a wide-viewing angle display that could fix the viewing angle problems that have been plaguing LCD-LED TVs for years.