Mini-LED and OLED are the best TV options for a new TV. But which one should you get? Here are all their pros and cons.
An RGB Mini-LED TV is a type of LED TV that uses a backlight made of tiny red, green, and blue LEDs to produce the visuals ...
All TV lovers know the joy of visiting the John Lewis TV department and gawking at the gallery of gorgeous 4K screens – usually playing a brightly-coloured nature documentary that seems tailor-made to ...
OLED TVs are available in sizes from 48 to 97 inches but LCD TVs come in smaller and even larger sizes than that -- with many more choices in between -- so LCD wins. At the high end of the size scale, ...
LED TVs typically use less electricity than OLEDs. LEDs have consistent backlighting, while OLED power use varies with content brightness and screen size.
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 ...
Dawson writes: What’s the difference between mini-LED and full-array local dimming. He’s looking into buying a new TV, is doing some research, and sees a lot of folks getting excited about mini-LED ...
OLED has been around for decades, with companies from Kodak to Mitsubishi trying new takes on the technology. It wasn’t until LG debuted its OLED TVs in the early 2010s that the technology became ...
Size Approximately 4 inches high, 9.4 inches long, and .55 inches deep (with Joy-Con attached) 3.9mm thick Weight Approximately .71 pounds (.93 pounds with Joy-Con controllers attached) TBD Screen ...
The tl;dr is that if all you care about is picture quality, OLED is the way to go. If you want something extremely large (100-plus inches), extremely bright (too much ambient light in your room), or ...