Samsung unveils 130-inch micro RGB TV at CES 2026
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While most brands are still getting to grips with simple RGB implementations of these next-gen screen technologies, Hisense is already adding a fourth color dimension.
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CES 2026 reveals RGB TV breakthroughs and bigger screen trends
The TV industry is getting ready to take the boldest leap of color in decades: CES 2026 is already coming to pass as a year when RGB TVs put white LED backlights of traditional LCDs at the backburner,
RGB Mini LED and Micro RGB TVs improve LCD picture quality with higher brightness and wider color gamut, but still face LCD limits. Learn about models, prices, and OLED comparisons. Buying a TV in 2025 isn’t as simple as picking between OLED and LCD.
There will be two models: the Q10M Ultra, and the Q9M. Based on TCL's standard naming conventions, we can assume that these are both pretty high up in TCL's range – the TCL QM9K is its highest-end regular mini-LED in 2025, while there is a quite specialist TCL X11K above that.
Forward-looking: Sony has unveiled a new display technology called General RGB LED Backlight Technology, which is expected to improve how colors are presented on screens. This approach replaces traditional blue LEDs in mini-LED TVs with RGB LEDs, allowing ...
Samsung provided ground transportation from Brooklyn, New York, to Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, so Ars could demo its Micro RGB TV. Ars does not accept paid editorial content. ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS, New Jersey—Micro LED is still years away, but the next best ...
I've tested a lot of TVs, and I think RGB backlight systems could be what moves display quality forward. I've seen two models from Hisense and Samsung and I'm impressed. I’m PCMag’s home theater and AR/VR expert, and your go-to source of information ...
LED TVs are about to get a lot better. As demonstrated by Hisense and to some extent Samsung at CES 2025, a new backlight technology called RGB LED is poised to improve the quality and efficiency of TVs that use LED backlights and LCD panels to work their ...
I don’t like the term “OLED Killer.” It’s been beaten to death, and is now pretty much clickbait. Only once, recently, I applied the term to a TV, mentioning it only to stoke discussion. But I think I have found a real potential OLED killer.
It might not be obvious unless you’ve taken one apart, but most of the TVs and monitors listed as “LED” are simply LCD panels that use a bank of LEDs to illuminate them from behind. Similarly, what are generally referred to as “LCDs” are LCD ...