Quantum dot is a physics term. specifically dealing with quantum physics.Well I'm not sure you need Quantum Dots or whatever new fangled fancy term they want to call it for a tv that is only 32" in size.
It has all the benefits of OLED
... ok, so after looking it up someQuantum dot still has a backlight. It isn't anywhere near OLED for black levels, which is by far the most important part of the picture quality equation.
I miss plasma more than CRT. I am running a plasma for living room TV, because most similarly priced LCDs suck in comparison, even today. You can get 43" upper mid-end 4K TVs, but they aren't that cheap.
BTW, I owned a 34" 16:9 widescreen CRT in 2001. When it got delivered, one of the delivery guys couldn't lift his side of it. I had to move it with the other delivery guy. The TV was something like 175-200 lbs.
This was pre-HDMI though, so my HD image was through component video. Worked well with my cable box and later on, my Xbox 360. Having zero input lag was great.
If you say that you miss your crt then you might as well say "you miss black and white tv as well".
I love my 4K "Thank You Jesus".
This thread is perfect example of why plasma died.
No one cares about picture quality. They care about quiet, bright, and thin.
I will be crying when/if my plasmas die. It will be a sad sad day
I miss plasma more than CRT.
Me too, if my 55" Panasonic plasma ever dies i will be very unhappy.
Yes.. I'm tempted to sell my Samsung 64" F8500 Plasma due to life stuff and its insane resale value but.. then I have nights like this recent Sunday evening and watching Game of Thrones in 1080p is just SO good looking on my set that I can't bring myself to do it until I see OLEDs at ~$2,000 for a 60" set.
This thread is perfect example of why plasma died.
No one cares about picture quality. They care about quiet, bright, and thin.
Agreed. It blows my mind when I go to people's houses and see their 50' LED watching DVDs. Its just INSANE!
The worst is watching 4:3 DVDs and they force it to stretch to 16:9. I once did the dishes at a friend's house (his dishes) to avoid watching a TV show like that.