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Samsung Micro RGB vs. QLED vs. OLED: I compared all three and found a surprising winner

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Why This Matters

Samsung's introduction of the Micro RGB TV R95H marks a significant advancement in display technology by integrating blue LEDs directly into the panel, resulting in superior color accuracy and contrast comparable to OLEDs. This innovation could reshape the competitive landscape of high-end TVs, offering consumers enhanced visual quality with potentially better efficiency. The breakthrough underscores the ongoing push for more precise, vibrant, and energy-efficient display solutions in the tech industry.

Key Takeaways

Kerry Wan/ZDNET

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Samsung just released its new Micro RGB TV R95H, featuring breakthrough technology that introduces individually-lit LEDs capable of producing blue light to the panel. Samsung has long used a clever workaround to produce blue hues with a blue LED backlight behind panels made of red, green, and yellow LEDs, and it works, but it isn't very accurate.

Also: The best Samsung TVs you can buy

By integrating blue LEDs directly into the same unit as red and green, the R95H is capable of producing a wider range of colors with stunning accuracy. While it shares the same DNA as its QLED cousin, the QN90F, the Micro RGB panel offers contrast and detailing more akin to the S95H OLED. With blue, red, and green LEDs integrated into millions of specially-designed micro lenses, you get color accuracy that sets out to outstrip the king of color: the OLED.

Why blue is a big deal

The scientists who developed the blue LED won a Nobel Prize. Seriously. For decades, the blue LED was by far the most difficult (and expensive) to try and develop, and was critical in the development of white LED light. A white LED is actually a blue one with the addition of a special chemical that flouresces when electricity is applied.

Also: Why TVs look bright and vibrant in stores, but dull in your living room - and how to fix it

Once the technology was refined, it was a massive leap forward for displays and power efficiency. An LED bulb can last tens of thousand of hours and is up to 90% more efficient than incandescent bulbs, meaning displays could pack more into smaller spaces and were significantly less power-hungry. This in turn extended the battery life of mobile devices and reduced power consumption for wired electronics.

Specifications

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