Showing posts with label 4K Ultra HD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 4K Ultra HD. Show all posts

LG 65EG9600 65-inch 4K Ultra HD 3D Curved Smart OLED TV.


    New LG 55EG9600 55-inch and LG 65EG9600 65-inch 4K Ultra HD 3D Curved Smart OLED TV (2015 model) with LG EG9600 Series review, is one choice for those looking for a new 4K Ultra HD 3D Curved Smart OLED TV. Which is a quality product and to gain popularity with users. You can reading description and features before decide to buy product 55EG9600 and 65EG9600 Model. LG 55EG9600 55-inch and LG 65EG9600 65-inch 4K Ultra HD 3D Curved Smart OLED TV (2015 model), Details are as follows.

    This is the first 4K OLED screen we've tested, and it's everything we hoped it would be. The LG 55EG9600 delivers the combination we've been waiting for – 4K Ultra HD resolution and OLED technology - and it does so with spectacular results.

What makes OLED special?
     An OLED panel consists of pixels made up of organic carbon-based film, which light up when a current is put through them. Unlike LCD screens that need a backlight, OLED pixels are self-lighting. So when a pixel turns off, it's pitch black. There's no residual light bleeding into dark areas as with backlit LCDs, meaning we can have proper, inky blacks while retaining brightness, punch and clarity - the holy grail of TV technology. 

    LG takes its OLED technology further by adding a fourth white pixel alongside the standard RGB (red, green and blue) model for more accurate colours. So does it work? Absolutely. The LG 55EG9600 delivers on every promise, from intensely dark black scenes to bright and punchy whites. There are almost 8.3 million pixels on this 4K Ultra HD screen, and each looks crystal clear, punchy and precise.

    We stream House of Cards in 4K, and are blown away by the detail on display. The depth of colours is breathtaking. They aren't just richer, there are simply more precise shades of them on the screen, giving a wonderfully vivid feel to the picture.

Fine textures
    The interplay of light and shadow on trees, buildings and on people's faces is fascinating. Unlike early OLED sets, where the strong contrast meant nuances in detail were swallowed up, this set expertly delivers the fine textures of a black suit and the myriad colours within a sun flare.

    Motion handling is stable, although we turn de-judder and de-blur settings to smooth out the picture more. Those characteristics remain when watching HD channels and Blu-ray films. We play our test favourite star Trek Blu-ray and the spaceships look convincing. The steely structure of the USS Enterprise looks spectacular against the pitch-black backdrop of space.

Bright and punchy
    If you've ever had doubts about 3D films, watch Gravity on this LG telly. The passive technology means the 3D effect is gentle on your eyes, but the depth offered by OLED is utterly immersive.

    The advantages of OLED kick in when you see just how dizzyingly vast and deep the void-like blackness of space looks, while the millions of stars are piercingly bright. You get four lightweight glasses in the box, and we'd urge you to give 3D a go.

    But what about standard definition? While it's a shame to watch ropey old standard def on such a talented 4K screen, the LG TV works hard to upscale Who Framed Roger Rabbit? on DVD. There's the expected fuzzy edges and drop in absolute detail, but the picture is bright and punchy. We do find, though, that our Award-winning Samsung 4K TV is a touch crisper when it comes to upscaling.

    LG has teamed up with Harman Kardon to outfit its 2015 screens with better sound. The 55EG9600 has two down-firing speakers at the base of the screen, and they sound smooth and weighty. Voices are clear and expressive, with enough detail to hold your attention. We wish it sounded more open and dynamic, though, as it can sound overly damped even at higher volumes.

    Switching from standard to Cinema sound mode breathes more space and scale into the sound without losing that solid detail, still, to accompany such a fine screen, you should have a dedicated 5.1 speaker package to get the full cinematic impact.

Gorgeous floating effect
    For the money it may demand, you'll want something rather special and the TV itself looks beautiful. The gentle swoop of the curved screen, the wafer-thin panel and that gorgeous floating screen effect - it's a design that looks effortlessly expensive.

    The screen is only slightly curved, but you still get a slight distortion if you're sitting off-axis from the centre. Curved LCD screens have so far also given us washed-out colours when viewed from an angle, but here's OLED's party trick: the contrast stays just as strong, the blacks just as deep and whites as bright and punchy as ever even when viewed from extreme angles. There is, incredibly, no fading whatsoever.

Ace up its sleeve
    A glance at the back panel shows that the screen isn't super thin all the way, giving scope for connectivity, internal speakers, and the ability to wall-mount the TV.

   Connections include three HDMI inputs (two of which can handle 4K/60p), three USB ports, an optical output and legacy analogue connections. You can access the internet using wired ethernet or wi-fi, and we experience no dropouts in streaming 4K.

    LG has yet another ace up its sleeve: WebOS 2.0. We were pretty effusive in our appreciation of LG's smart interface last year, and the company claims the updated version is 60 per cent faster. The Launcher is intuitive, and moving around the interface is quicker. The animations are fluid and apps launch almost instantly.

The future of TV
    LG's updated remote finally gives the Magic Remote a proper keypad, so you don't have to faff about with two remotes, other updates include clever shortcuts to settings and inputs that don't take up too much of the screen, as well as a 'My Channels' section in the Launcher. The idea is that you can launch all your online streaming services as instantly as your other regular shortcuts.

    It's fair to say we're impressed with the LG 55EG9600 but it's not without reservations. Price might be an issue, but it's worth remembering that you're paying the premium for the new OLED technology and that elegant set design.

    However, much like the first Full HD and 4K screens, we expect the price to come down once OLED is more widespread. We can't say for sure if this is the best TV we'll see this year. Nor can we make a judgement on whether OLED is better than LCD. But if this gorgeous LG 55EG9600 is anything to go by, the future of TV looks spectacular.

Special offers. If you decide to buy product
LG Electronics 55EG9600 55-inch 4K Ultra HD 3D Curved Smart OLED TV.
LG Electronics 65EG9600 65-inch 4K Ultra HD 3D Curved Smart OLED TV.

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LG 65UF9500 65-inch 4K Ultra HD 3D Smart LED TV

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    LG 65UF9500 65-inch 4K Ultra HD 3D Smart LED TV (2015 model). Is one choice for those looking for a new 4K  Ultra HD. You  can reading description and features before decide to buy product 65UF9500. And  this is review LG 65UF9500 65-inch 4K Ultra HD 3D Smart LED TV,  Details are as follows.


    Just when we thought we had seen it all with the set above, LG sends us this scorcher of a set, we will tell you exactly why in a bit. One look at this new LG and you go weak in the knees and teary in your retinas. All thanks to the edgy stand and support for 4K picture. No curved screen here, but trust us, you won't be complaining. For starters, you get a gesture-sensing Magic Remote, IPS LED panel with micro dimming for inky blacks, Harman Kardon sound, built-in timer recording and Web OS 2.0. LG also claims to equip this
panel with its version of extended colour space, dubbed ColorPrime. Finding content that would take advantage of this feature is proving to be a bit of a struggle.
    Talk picture quality and the LG shines in every department. The edge-lit LEDs offer reference-grade imagery. We could hardly contain our excitement while playing Far Cry 4 in 4K, like little boys, we were glued on to the screen for hours. Spin a Blu-ray disc or play 4K content and you will be stunned with the retina-popping grasp of LG over colours and overall detail. Scenes in The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies CGI or non CGI, are painted with immense levels of detail. The only slight chink being the patch that appears on a full white screen. The LG set's sound output is top-notch when compared to other TVs currently available in the market. We enjoyed our time with this TV and if you need one good reason not to buy a curved screen, this is it. Source : What Hi Fi


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Samsung UN85HU8550 85-Inch 4K Ultra HD 120Hz 3D Smart LED TV

4k ultra hd     Samsung UN85HU8550 55-Inch 4K Ultra HD. Is a product from amazon.com, One choice for big size 4K Ultra HD, by Samsung. With Samsung UN85HU8550 review which is a quality product. If you are interested in our products. You can reading description and features before decide to buy product UN55HU8550. And this is full review Samsung UN55HU8550 85-Inch 4K Ultra HD 120Hz 3D Smart LED TV (2014 Model), Details are as follows.

    While Samsung has reserved its best technologies for its flagship HU9000 curved TV, the HU8550 (available in 50, 55, 60, 65, 75,and 85-inch screen sizes) is still very much a high-end TV, sporting features like a Clear Motion Rate of 1,000 (it's a 100Hz panel), a new local dimming method called UHD Dimming, a quad-core processor to ensure operation smoothness, and a built-in DVB-T2 tuner for tuning in to digital TV broadcast. But unlike the HU9000, the HU8550 lacks a built-in camera. Design-wise, we like that Samsung didn't try to be too fancy, and has gone for a simple brushed metal stand (non-swivel though) and a thin metal trim around the frame. The focus is on the giant panel, and rightly so.

    Speaking of future-proofing, arguably our favorite feature of the HU8550 (in fact, for all of Samsung's 4K TVs) is its ability to upgrade to the latest hardware (sans the panel, of course) and software simply by plugging in an external box that Samsung calls the One Connect box or Evolution Kit down the road. With this upgrade path, your investment will not become obsolete as fast compared to other TVs. That said, it's not as if the HU8550 is lacking anything. Out of the box, it already supports standards like HEVC, HDMI 2.0, MHL 3.0, and HDCP 2.2.

    Samsung's 2014 Smart Control remote connects to the TV via Bluetooth, and is delightful to use. We find the touchpad handy for scrolling webpages; and even for menus that don't support it, there are arrow keys to fall back on (or you can just use the standard remote). On the UI front, Samsung continues to improve its Smart Hub interface, and this version has a new Multimedia panel that combines the previous Photo, Video, Music, and Social panels. Compared to LG's generous use of animations, it can still look a tad intimidating, especially to non-advanced users.

    Another feature we like is Multi-Link Screen, a contextual multitasking mode that lets you split the screen real estate, so you can do things like having live TV on one half of the screen and contextual search results on the Web browser, relevant YouTube video content, or a compatible app up on the other half at the same time. A Soccer mode that allows you to enlarge a selected area on the screen is also pretty nifty, but we aren't fans of the pumped up colors and contrast this mode brings.

PERFORMANCE - SAMSUNG HU8550 4K Ultra HD
    At a viewing distance of 1,5m, it was hard not to be impressed by the big screen and the boatloads of details that the HU8550 brought. Even though the HU8550 didn't come with the PurColor and Auto Depth Enhancer technologies like the curved HU9000, the sense of 3D-ness was very much present in the Grand Canyon Adventure, a 4K documentary that was on the Samsung UHD Video Pack (basically a hard drive preloaded with 4K material). In fact, using just the standard picture mode and without doing any kind of calibration, we found images to exhibit just the right amount of 'pop'.

    The HU8550 also excelled when we switched to 1080p content. Even though it had been upscaled, details in the Blu-ray version of Skyfall still looked super-sharp. We also didn't experience any judder for 1080p24 2D material.

    Although the HU8550's local dimming method relied on fewer zones than the curved HU9000, we found the former's backlight control to work well across different types of materials.
Sure, during low APL scenes in The Dark Knight, its black level performance, while good, was still no match for OLED TVs, but in movies with primarily highAPL scenes and bright colors, it was capable of the brightest whites. The TV also exhibited very good motion clarity, thanks to effective black frame insertion implementation; even with the LED Clear Motion setting turned on, there was hardly any flicker. Lastly, 3D image brightness remained high, and the slight crosstalk of the active 3D system didn't ruin the viewing experience. For audio, the small front-firing speakers into the TV's cabinet actually did quite a good job, as we could quite make out the many multi-directional audio moments in the star Trek Into Darkness movie. The HU8550 also incorporates a Dolby MS11 multi-stream decoder that supports decoding of many of today's popular audio formats.
Source : HWM Singapore magazine.

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LG 79UB9800 79-Inch 4K Ultra HD 120Hz 3D LED TV

    79UB9800 good choice for big size 4K Ultra HD, by LG Electronics. With LG 79UB9800 review which is a quality product. If you are interested in our products. You can reading description and features before decide to buy product 79UB9800. And this is full review LG Electronics 79UB9800 79-Inch 4K Ultra HD 120Hz 3D LED TV (2014 Model), Details are as follows.


    While OLED TVs have seen price drops recently, they remain too expensive for most people, and limited in variety compared to LCD TVs. Which is why LG, who continues to invest heavily in OLED, still churns out new LED LCD TV  series on a very frequent basis. Available in 65, 79, and 84-inch screen sizes, the UB9800 is LG's flagship 4K TV, and so naturally, it packs top-end specs and all the bells and whistles that the company can come out with, including an Ultra Clarity Index of 1,300, sound co-developed with Harman Kardon, a maximum 5.2-channel, 120W speaker system, a built-in 8-megapixel camera, support for 4K HEVC 60p decoding, and WebOs.

    Now, the Ul refresh brought about by WebOs is obvious right from the get-go. From tuning the TV channels, connecting to your Wi-Fi network, to pairing with the LG Magic Remote, you're guided by an animated character named Bean Bird. All of a sudden, boring and technical configurations now seem fun and easy. And it goes deeper: there's also a new launcher, a left-to-right scrollable straight line menu that runs along the lower portion of the screen. The idea is to allow you to browse through service or content options without having to navigate away from the existing view, not to mention letting you watch a show, play a game, or browse the Internet while searching or downloading other content at the same time.

   WebOs will also know when you plug in an external device and recognize what kind of device it is, and then pops up a menu with all the relevant options. And there's a Live Menu with channel and recording options that you can open and keep within easy reach while watching TV. The ability to resume playback (say, of a YouTube video) after you've switched inputs and come back to it is also delightful. All in all, even as a 1.0 release, we already like how WebOs has panned out on LG's TVs. We're excited to see how this year's WebOs 2.0-based TVs fare.

 Design-wise, we're fans of LG's hardy 'stable screen', though not so much of the protruding stand that runs the wide of the panel. Connectivity-wise, you're pretty much covered by 4 HDMI ports (of which 3 support HDMI 2.0) and 3 USB ports. Along with support for Intel WiDi, Miracast, and MHL, you've got all the tools to get content on your mobile device onto the big screen at your disposal.

PERFORMANCE - LG UB9800
    Decked with the best technologies that LG has to offer, the UB9800 mostly excellent image quality came as no surprise to us. The IPS panel went pretty bright in our tests, and that bodes well if you're the kind who enjoys plenty of sunlight in the living room. But be careful of positioning to avoid reflections.

    With over 8 million pixels, the UB980T shone when fed with properly done 4K content. Case in point: the sharp footage and natural-looking colors of the dishes in the Food Odyssey 4K documentary that came in this 500GB hard drive that LG used to give to buyers of select 4K TV models couldn't be more lifelike. The Wolverine movie (also in the hard drive) also hardly put a foot wrong, and to quote our own notes, "the red strands of Yukio's hair were impeccably rendered".

    With plenty of details, depth, and sharpness, 3D images also looked amazing on this passive 3D TV. If you love watching 3D content, the UB980T is the TV to get.Coupled with the 90W, 5.2-channel front speakers of our 79-inch test unit, we truly had a cinema-like experience.

    That said, the UB9800 wasn't without faults. Comparing out of the box performance, we found colors on the UB9800 a tad muted than those on the Samsung HU8550. This is largely due to the IPS panel LG uses, which although improves viewing angles, also makes colors 'pop' less than rival panels. That said, the TV offers plenty of image controls (including a 20-point white balance control), so advanced users can tweak to their heart's content. For the average user, the ISF Expert 1 mode is a good preset for critical viewing; and It gave us accurate colors from the get-go. Unfortunately, the dreaded backlight blooming was present across all LED Local Dimming settings, but we managed to lessen the effect by lowering the backlight intensity. Lastly, resolution in fast- moving scenes remained good with TruMotion engaged. 
Source : HWM Singapore magazine.

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