Linus is like that scene in Futurama where the Professor turns on his giant TV, immediately gets an ad for a larger TV, shouts "AW HELL," and then throws his drink through the screen.
"Spent over ten thousand dollars on the largest TV in the world, spent over fifteen thousand dollars on the largest TV in the world, and spent over twenty thousand dollars on the largest TV in the world"
I work for a company in Seoul that will custom make an OLED panel for the very rich. The largest we’ve made is 854cm. It was going in the home of a man who wanted his entire wall to be a television.
@DuckTheDuckTheDuck I want to see him install the 163". Someone in another comment said they're modular so they have to be pieced together. Curious to see how easy that is to do and how it works.
i think the most underrated part of the new wall is that it’s completely borderless. that 21:9 configuration looks so clean, the paintings look like they’re actually painting on a wrap around canvas. not having any edge makes it look incredibly futuristic
Its very cyberpunk but it looks stunning. Borders always have some distraction when viewing content. I think one day that look will be the norm and borders will be a thing of the past. TVs will be dirt cheap and enormous while having almost no bezels and be completely wireless other than the power cable.
That samsung wall shot at 5:35 absolutely blew me away. I thought it was an animation that was edited in at first before I realized what I was looking at.
Really makes me glad I don't work for Geek Squad Home Theater anymore. I hated installing the 98"-110" TV's. There's no way I'm installing 163" TVs lol.
@@ChaseSchleichyou’ve actually installed the 110”?!? Or you meant you would’ve hated to instal it ? The 163 like the 136” would be made of modules though so thankfully it’s small puzzle piece. Still would be an annoying instal but at least not heavy 🤷🏻♂️
@roco9504 I installed a couple of the 110s. The 98" and 100" were much more popular though in my final months at Geek Squad because they would drop to as low as $2000. I was getting a couple of those a month. The 110" was way more expensive, but some people still bought the damn things.
I am shocked o.o that sucker is $20K after all… wow You know what doesn’t help? The darn free instal promo that’s been going of for a year now already 😭 (I’m an installer still..)
Honestly I think that's fine for a TV, just depends on what kind of content you consume. The vast majority of it is not 4K unless you have a humongous library or top streaming plans and no data cap. 1080 is still viable, I feel, for a TV, not a PC.
A masterclass would be nice.. not I'm in kindergarten level but advanced enough to treat the viewers with enough respect to want to learn and not treat them like "they have a triple figure IQ" and laugh at mere mortals because they didn't just understand it from the moment they popped out of their mum.
@@garystinten9339 no.. it would not be a close fight if the standards is equalized. the colours, the saturation the brightness is just not the same no matter how expensive your projector is. perhaps sharpness of image is the only one you could compare as the projector pricing gets higher
@@r.sakarollsafe1285 I was talking about the things a person would need to know to educate themselves about tv panels and projectors.. as in clarity, sharpness, all the technical terms so when someone was looking at a panel or a tv monitor, they can easily understand what is going on.
Honestly took about 5 mins of explaining before i realised "RGB backlight " was in the screen and not just a cool effect it would display on the wall behind!!😂
OLED is finally mature enough that I've got one and it didn't cost me thousands and thousands. "The future is here" you'd think. But I wonder if by next time I upgrade OLED won't be top dog anymore. A world where tech like this gets small and cheap enough then the average person can finally buy a truly gorgeous TV that isn't inherently disposable (OLED burn-in) would be amazing.
TVs are endlessly evolving, and still have room for improvement. Yet I cannot think even 10 years in future you will be in dark room with current gen OLED and think this is crap.
@@ivonakis I will be with a current gen OLED that's been in use for 10 years. I'm thinking about what it'll be like in 30+ years time when your dad's ancient TV is still some gorgeous mini/microLED. But OLEDs in good condition will be rare.
I’m reminded of the futurama joke where the professor has the largest tv and its first commercial is for a newer bigger tv so the professor immediately destroys the tv in anger.
Very first demonstration of an HDR display I ever witnessed was over 15 years ago at a student demonstration at RIT Imaging Science department. Mind was blown. They stuck two DLP protectors together (on their sides) behind an Apple Cinema Display LCD panel removed from its main body. The combined projectors provided a grayscale backlight image at the same resolution as the LCD panel that effectively multiplied the contrast. They showed a whole bunch of night shots side by side with a standard Cinema Display. LCD tech at the time had much poorer contrast, so these photos all looked washed out and gray on the standard display while the Frankenstein had perfect blacks and low light details. I suspect they had issues with oversaturation when attempting a color projection instead of just grayscale.
DIY Perks made a high-contrast monitor by taking apart two identical monitors and stacking their panels. He had to use a much brighter (and hotter) backlight to make it work, and the picture ended up with a slight halo effect due to the extra diffuser he had to sandwich in between, but it worked.
We should all thank Linus for helping us decide on the TV that we're going to be buying in about 10 years when they become cheap enough for the common man to afford
I reckon the script is almost finished before even going there based on the blurbs received in advance. The edit is done back at the office for sure maybe by putting 2 editors splitting the video in half. ?
@@mrhenry7775 There was one editor (Emily) in the group picture of the team on their community page. I know that the factory tour at Computex was edited by Dennis who was in Taiwan with the team because Linus talked about it. Dennis might not normally edit anymore but he briefly worked in on-the-ground news collecting and is fast and knows the Linus style.
I remember being blown away the first time I saw one of the first generation of Sony HD monitors in a broadcast truck back in the early '90s. It's amazing how fer things have come since then.
i was ready to pull trigger on the 100inch.. imma gonna wait, god damn i never seen this coming (as linus did), its insane.. to thing the 100inch is the smallest version of this line up lmfao how i can bring this in my home, need portal guns soon!
That’s exactly what it is but still can’t deliver near to OLED blacks, which to me is far more important than being so bright it can bubble the paint on the opposite wall. EDIT: Any tech with "dimming zones" can not deliver perfect blacks by definition.
Yea but the lights can be less dense then the pixels. So the rough shape can be shown by the backlight, while the panel will sharpen the edges and draw in details. Same works for color
It's really not, OLEDs have the same colored light behind every sub-pixel, which then either gets filtered (e.g. LG, they have a white emitting OLED behind every subpixel, then a color filter on top of that to get the different colors), or they're used to stimulate quantum dots to create the desired color (e.g. Samsung's QD-OLED, blue emission layer that stimulates different sizes of quantum dots, which then re-emit different colors). These RGB mini/microLEDs are trying to have straight up red, green and blue LEDs that emit the desired color for each subpixel, no filtering needed. EDIT: This filtering on LG's panels leads to big efficiency losses in each of the individual colors, which is why they have that added white sub-pixel to boost brightness, the RGB ones combined don't get that bright. QD-OLEDs can be more efficient, hence why they can often get both brighter without the white sub-pixel, but especially each pure color is significantly brighter vs. WOLED, but we're still talking about at the best of times ~20% efficiency I think, meaning 80% of the light is lost. For reference I think even the best, most efficient LCD panels block about 90-95% of the light output of the backlight when set to full white, so a 1 000 nit output would require a ~10 000 nit backlight... This is why direct RGB control of individual colored LEDs is so tempting, you could potentially really up the efficiency.
Stupid question, but I'm also at CES, making video content for my work - and I run around with a simple Canon eos m50 m2 and Røde wireless go 2 - what does the Linus media group use on these events? I would assume it's not the same as used in the actual office. Would be cool to see what you guys choose to use out and abooot :)
We've recently installed an almost 300 inch and an 146 inch Samsung The Wall at our office with (hopefully) more to come. They are amazing. The creases are visible on light backgrounds but only if the surrounding light is hitting it from the side, not really noticable.
Nobody watches 9600 hours continously. Even if you watch 3hrs a day, that's still about ten years worth of watching. And what is that 'degredation' anyway? Will you even notice it? Will it go from 10,000 nits to 8423 nits? Like that's not still blindingly bright on this size. In other words: a non-issue, FUD.
imagine being a normal CES visitor. and you see a weird tiny canadian boy hiding the the plants and pushing another plant while being filmed behind a wall
Micro or mini LED refers to the backlight. You can't have a display with no backlight. The difference between the two is the size of those backlight pixels
@@spicy_mint @TheHaloSkullMaster MiniLED certainly refers to the backlight - I have 2 miniLED displays. I was under the impression that MicroLED pixels are made up of 3 sub-pixel-sized LEDs. They ARE the light, they don't need a backlight. Perhaps that samsung is a single RGB LED per pixel in that case? When he said "If only there was an RGB one like HiSense (backlit MiniLED)"...I got confused and thought he meant this was also RGB backlit..but that doesn't make sense
@@spinaltap22 If i had to guess I would say the "old" Samsung micro-lED modules were using a blue LED with a phosphor to produce white light, that then went through a colour filter in order to produce the RGB components, where as the last prototype uses R/G/B LED's for each subpixel and can thus produce a higher colour purity (display manufactures would call this direct view). This is all a complete guess though.
*Even with the bad economic, My life has totally changed since I started with $5,000 and now I make $78,700 every 14days, I can afford any car or house of my choice right now….,God bless expert Mrs Esther A Berg*
for the confused ppl who saw RGB microLED and went "wait a minute, arent microLED TVs already RGB?" yeah apparently RGB microLED is somewhat the same principle as the hisense"RGB mini LED" where they used microLED as backlight for the LCD while on a normal microLED TV just has RGB as pixels with no LCD infront.
Indeed, just a TV, a powercord and a few HDMI cable inputs with a simple (non-smart) OS. Been using a Nvidia Shield Pro for years now... don't miss the Samsung "smart" functions at all.
I've always wondered why display manufacturers didn't use a color backlight. Now I finally have my answer: They wanted to, they just couldn't until now. I cannot WAIT to see these insane displays start to show up on the market.
Cadillac used the Samsung "lego" like connection microled type panels for their NAIAS (North American International Auto Show) display - they were 25x25 and we had to take them down and place them into pelican type containers fully foamed out for protection and one of the workers dropped one during what we call "tear down" and the price of the monitor was 23,000 dollars. That was back in 2018
Linus is like that scene in Futurama where the Professor turns on his giant TV, immediately gets an ad for a larger TV, shouts "AW HELL," and then throws his drink through the screen.
y is this so accurate wth
ua-cam.com/video/WK76j8sdVaw/v-deo.htmlfeature=shared
'have you seen my new 301 inch TV?'
'Hypnotoad is brough to you by the MangaPhallix 302 inch TV.... iiitttsss BIGGEEERRR'
'AW HELL!'
this needs to be pinned
@@joshuamagdas thank you for not betraying my trust with that link
Linus will forever update the theatre room as long as the tvs get more inches and more pixels. endless content
eventually he will need to buy a new theatre room as well
Also brightness, don't forget those lumen!
If I had Linus money and Linus hook-ups. I would too lol
The only was he’s gaining inches.
If people keep wanting them. I for one grow weary of the same exact thing said every new convention.
1:18 i love the display has ""miniLED-(final final).jpg" on the top left. A designer's daily life
I mean it also has a glaring typo in the headline of that slide. Technonogy instead of technology.
@@thomasNL030they spent their entire budget on developing this tv they had nothing left to hire a translator
😂
@@thomasNL030 Techonogy is the typo.
Can’t wait in a few months for Linus to buy a tv like these for the cinema room, again
It's a write off 🤷♂️😄
Buy four and then spend a video trying to justify how it’s easy and useful to get a single image to display across all 4
"Spent over ten thousand dollars on the largest TV in the world, spent over fifteen thousand dollars on the largest TV in the world, and spent over twenty thousand dollars on the largest TV in the world"
And then immediately seeing a tv wayy better
Hahaha
Yes yes It sure looks amazing on my 15 inch dell inspiron 3501's screen.
It's so vivid it looks like a green screen
😂
You should see it on my 6" phone display.
@@finestPluginssame
@@finestPluginseverything looks great on a 6” screen
Linus is out here collecting 100-plus-inch TVs like Pokémon cards.
😂 yo that's kinda sick
good that means employees might get some of them during the christmas giveaways.
This is his mid-life crisis collection/hobby lol
Well, they're more useful than pokemon cards at least. =)
Atleast you can buy a TV.
2:30 Linus dropping the name Hisense is synced with the tv in the background. Absolute cinema
@LeMellow literally saw it, scripted down ONCE and saw your comment. Cinema.
I work for a company in Seoul that will custom make an OLED panel for the very rich. The largest we’ve made is 854cm. It was going in the home of a man who wanted his entire wall to be a television.
Damm a 8.5 meter TV
aspect ratio?
Installing that must be a nightmare
@@BryantWhite Powering it as well, this thing might draw more than an oven at full brightness
How many zeros in the price mate
Wow 334in TV probably the real worlds biggest
i really love how he always has to get new tvs the size of a village
Bros making me jealous
Compensating?
@@sorek__"She's asian it's fine"
- Linus "LTT" Sebastian
@DuckTheDuckTheDuck I want to see him install the 163". Someone in another comment said they're modular so they have to be pieced together. Curious to see how easy that is to do and how it works.
Well yes, he loves reminding us how much money he has
i think the most underrated part of the new wall is that it’s completely borderless. that 21:9 configuration looks so clean, the paintings look like they’re actually painting on a wrap around canvas. not having any edge makes it look incredibly futuristic
Its very cyberpunk but it looks stunning. Borders always have some distraction when viewing content. I think one day that look will be the norm and borders will be a thing of the past. TVs will be dirt cheap and enormous while having almost no bezels and be completely wireless other than the power cable.
That samsung wall shot at 5:35 absolutely blew me away. I thought it was an animation that was edited in at first before I realized what I was looking at.
Yeah or a green screen
That was a phone.
It looked like a window
@@HawkSeathat's a big phone.
00:27 My mind Registered it as a Actual Hand ! lol
Don't feel inadequate, Linus. 110" is not small. It's above average! 😝💯
Edit: Never mind, I saw the 163" size. 110" is small after all.
Really makes me glad I don't work for Geek Squad Home Theater anymore. I hated installing the 98"-110" TV's. There's no way I'm installing 163" TVs lol.
@@ChaseSchleichyou’ve actually installed the 110”?!? Or you meant you would’ve hated to instal it ?
The 163 like the 136” would be made of modules though so thankfully it’s small puzzle piece. Still would be an annoying instal but at least not heavy 🤷🏻♂️
@roco9504 I installed a couple of the 110s. The 98" and 100" were much more popular though in my final months at Geek Squad because they would drop to as low as $2000. I was getting a couple of those a month. The 110" was way more expensive, but some people still bought the damn things.
I am shocked o.o that sucker is $20K after all… wow
You know what doesn’t help? The darn free instal promo that’s been going of for a year now already 😭 (I’m an installer still..)
When I was in Dubai, Sharp has a 217" TV it cost $176,189.99 US dollars.
163" ? Yeah, I'm paying for installation.
We're going to need to start measuring tv size in Linuses
This tv is like 3 Linuses tall
@@unlimitedcreativity soon there will be a Linus for scale available at LTT store then
I am feeling inadequate with my 27” 1080p TV
I feel inadequate with my 40 inch TV across my bed
You should lol
your tvs are enough 👍
We call that a monitor
Honestly I think that's fine for a TV, just depends on what kind of content you consume. The vast majority of it is not 4K unless you have a humongous library or top streaming plans and no data cap. 1080 is still viable, I feel, for a TV, not a PC.
6:15 That is insane, you can't even feel it's a TV.
I appreciate the editors note. Not seeing that explained on other reviews of this tv.
there are 0 reviews of this TV
@ showcases
We need a comparison video of large TVs vs projectors. The tech is getting closer to parity, so the benefits of each are more important to understand
A masterclass would be nice.. not I'm in kindergarten level but advanced enough to treat the viewers with enough respect to want to learn and not treat them like "they have a triple figure IQ" and laugh at mere mortals because they didn't just understand it from the moment they popped out of their mum.
@@garystinten9339 no.. it would not be a close fight if the standards is equalized. the colours, the saturation the brightness is just not the same no matter how expensive your projector is. perhaps sharpness of image is the only one you could compare as the projector pricing gets higher
@@r.sakarollsafe1285 I was talking about the things a person would need to know to educate themselves about tv panels and projectors.. as in clarity, sharpness, all the technical terms so when someone was looking at a panel or a tv monitor, they can easily understand what is going on.
Honestly took about 5 mins of explaining before i realised "RGB backlight " was in the screen and not just a cool effect it would display on the wall behind!!😂
Same😅
3:47 I thought he was gonna aay "money doesn't fix stupidity"
I just sold 3 kidneys to get my oled monitor, and it already feels "obsolete".
Nice
At least they weren't your kidneys
0:54 LINUS!!..... STOP SATURATING MY EARES AND GET OUTTTT!!!!!!!!!!!!
6:08 I zoned out a little bit and thought this was donkey kong
A 21:9 modular TV sounds sick
There, there. It's okay.
Dimming zones per inch is much more helpful to know!
Imagine when screens will replace projectors in cinemas!
Already did a lot of ppl buying 85” 110”
OLED is finally mature enough that I've got one and it didn't cost me thousands and thousands. "The future is here" you'd think.
But I wonder if by next time I upgrade OLED won't be top dog anymore. A world where tech like this gets small and cheap enough then the average person can finally buy a truly gorgeous TV that isn't inherently disposable (OLED burn-in) would be amazing.
Micro LED is the zenith. It crushes everything else.
TVs are endlessly evolving, and still have room for improvement. Yet I cannot think even 10 years in future you will be in dark room with current gen OLED and think this is crap.
@@ivonakis I will be with a current gen OLED that's been in use for 10 years. I'm thinking about what it'll be like in 30+ years time when your dad's ancient TV is still some gorgeous mini/microLED. But OLEDs in good condition will be rare.
I would love to have a 100 inch OLED on my wall. I could do away with my projector. I just fear that burn in issue.
I’m reminded of the futurama joke where the professor has the largest tv and its first commercial is for a newer bigger tv so the professor immediately destroys the tv in anger.
I love the idea that you can put a low resolution TV behind a high resolution TV to "backlight" it. So, so silly
And yet it works.
Very first demonstration of an HDR display I ever witnessed was over 15 years ago at a student demonstration at RIT Imaging Science department. Mind was blown. They stuck two DLP protectors together (on their sides) behind an Apple Cinema Display LCD panel removed from its main body. The combined projectors provided a grayscale backlight image at the same resolution as the LCD panel that effectively multiplied the contrast. They showed a whole bunch of night shots side by side with a standard Cinema Display. LCD tech at the time had much poorer contrast, so these photos all looked washed out and gray on the standard display while the Frankenstein had perfect blacks and low light details. I suspect they had issues with oversaturation when attempting a color projection instead of just grayscale.
DIY Perks made a high-contrast monitor by taking apart two identical monitors and stacking their panels. He had to use a much brighter (and hotter) backlight to make it work, and the picture ended up with a slight halo effect due to the extra diffuser he had to sandwich in between, but it worked.
2:40 The irony of talking about the dimming zones and "ensuring that you don't get halos with the bright backlight" with a bright halo behind Linus.
Linus: I'm just gonna look at some new TVs
LTT employees: sigh, Ok, we're booking the lorry
Me looking the video on my hp pavilion from 2009:
A yes nice
Didn't think wicked cushions had that kind of money to sponsor LTT for CES. Good for them.
We should all thank Linus for helping us decide on the TV that we're going to be buying in about 10 years when they become cheap enough for the common man to afford
I wonder if Linus knows about the screen at AT&T stadium in Dallas. He should get that for his home theater 😂
every month Linus be like
"My New TV absolutely SUCKS ASS"
03:35 - 03:45 🤣 good one Linus
Alex continues to be the only reminder that this is a Canadian youtube channel
Linus talked about Yvonne getting a toque a week ago, and didn't translate it.
Ey? 😂
I love how this series shows how being on the cutting edge get you cut so perfectly
4:51 It's Mrwhosetheboss, he's the one buying 90% of the wall tv
Linus is the only person with self imposed buyers remorse
Bro, 116 with miniLED will be as cheap as a 911
@ 5:35 That's some innovative engineering, drilling using lasers for more stealthy wiring.
Here you see an end-stage TV fiend chasing another high in order to avoid withdrawal-induced tremors. Very sad.
Something so lovely about being on early enough to see a thumbnail and title hit the tube and be on late enough to notice it's changed
I find it crazy they manage to write a script, record it and edit the video all whilst still at CEX
I reckon the script is almost finished before even going there based on the blurbs received in advance. The edit is done back at the office for sure maybe by putting 2 editors splitting the video in half. ?
@@mrhenry7775 There was one editor (Emily) in the group picture of the team on their community page. I know that the factory tour at Computex was edited by Dennis who was in Taiwan with the team because Linus talked about it. Dennis might not normally edit anymore but he briefly worked in on-the-ground news collecting and is fast and knows the Linus style.
Would be pretty awesome to see one of these without the polarizing filter just to see how it works
They had a demo in the booth but the effect was simulated so I felt it better to just not bother including it -LS
@@LinusTechTips Definitely the best choice.
I remember being blown away the first time I saw one of the first generation of Sony HD monitors in a broadcast truck back in the early '90s.
It's amazing how fer things have come since then.
Well, at least we get to experience first hand how expensive keeping up with bleeding edge products is.
Nothing worse than turning on your freshly purchased worlds largest TV to see a commercial for the new world's largest TV.
163" Microled stomps into the chat.
Then realizes nobody who can afford it is on land at the moment.
Loving all these vids Linus & team
Good thing that we have linus for scale
He's just over four feet. Not good for scale.
I think you have a TV 'problem'....LOL
i was ready to pull trigger on the 100inch.. imma gonna wait, god damn i never seen this coming (as linus did), its insane.. to thing the 100inch is the smallest version of this line up lmfao how i can bring this in my home, need portal guns soon!
Get what fits the space. Optimal viewing is at 2x the screen width.
Weekly brand new Linus's TV
I guess they will just keep growing the tvs until they are physically too high to fit in a shipping container
Flexible screens to the rescue!
The wall comes in little panels about the size of a big persons hand, you then assemble them into the TV/display you want on site
How did they miss this typo lol "Dimming Display TechOnogy" 1:24
the rgb backlight sounds like an oled with extra steps
That’s exactly what it is but still can’t deliver near to OLED blacks, which to me is far more important than being so bright it can bubble the paint on the opposite wall.
EDIT: Any tech with "dimming zones" can not deliver perfect blacks by definition.
@@BumwineBeaudelaire OLED can burn in
Yea but the lights can be less dense then the pixels. So the rough shape can be shown by the backlight, while the panel will sharpen the edges and draw in details. Same works for color
If it fixes the burnin issue without using convoluted "fixes" and is much cheaper, i'm all for it.
It's really not, OLEDs have the same colored light behind every sub-pixel, which then either gets filtered (e.g. LG, they have a white emitting OLED behind every subpixel, then a color filter on top of that to get the different colors), or they're used to stimulate quantum dots to create the desired color (e.g. Samsung's QD-OLED, blue emission layer that stimulates different sizes of quantum dots, which then re-emit different colors).
These RGB mini/microLEDs are trying to have straight up red, green and blue LEDs that emit the desired color for each subpixel, no filtering needed.
EDIT: This filtering on LG's panels leads to big efficiency losses in each of the individual colors, which is why they have that added white sub-pixel to boost brightness, the RGB ones combined don't get that bright. QD-OLEDs can be more efficient, hence why they can often get both brighter without the white sub-pixel, but especially each pure color is significantly brighter vs. WOLED, but we're still talking about at the best of times ~20% efficiency I think, meaning 80% of the light is lost.
For reference I think even the best, most efficient LCD panels block about 90-95% of the light output of the backlight when set to full white, so a 1 000 nit output would require a ~10 000 nit backlight...
This is why direct RGB control of individual colored LEDs is so tempting, you could potentially really up the efficiency.
Should be a tradition at this point. Linus getting every biggest TV that comes out.
Every biggest consumer-grade TV that isn't showcased by every UA-camr at CES would be plenty.
Stupid question, but I'm also at CES, making video content for my work - and I run around with a simple Canon eos m50 m2 and Røde wireless go 2 - what does the Linus media group use on these events? I would assume it's not the same as used in the actual office. Would be cool to see what you guys choose to use out and abooot :)
What makes this a stupid question?
ua-cam.com/video/Ru4g4Rm0Mfo/v-deo.html
We've recently installed an almost 300 inch and an 146 inch Samsung The Wall at our office with (hopefully) more to come. They are amazing.
The creases are visible on light backgrounds but only if the surrounding light is hitting it from the side, not really noticable.
LOL at the "最終最終.jpg" 1:18
Hey Linus, don't feel bad!
RTINGs testing shows that Hisense has the worst rate of LCD backlight degradation after 9600 hours of continuous operation.
Just goes to show that Hisense can try to be Samsung, LG, and Sony all they want, but in the end, they're still Hisense.
Nobody watches 9600 hours continously. Even if you watch 3hrs a day, that's still about ten years worth of watching. And what is that 'degredation' anyway? Will you even notice it? Will it go from 10,000 nits to 8423 nits? Like that's not still blindingly bright on this size. In other words: a non-issue, FUD.
@@jurgentebeest6199 Probably slower degradation than an old consumer CRT set lol.
After 10.000 hours they will run about 25% darker.
@@Kiritomens Good, that means they'd still be extremingly bright if you want that. It's all really about short HDR highlights anyway.
@@jurgentebeest6199 im pretty sure lcd can recover from burn in too, its never permanent...so I dont see the issue here
imagine being a normal CES visitor. and you see a weird tiny canadian boy hiding the the plants and pushing another plant while being filmed behind a wall
bro changed the title on me
Can’t wait for when Linus renovates his house again to accommodate a tv finally too big for his cinema room.
Hang on - that last Samsung TV was 'RGB backlit MICRO LED'? Not Mini LED? I thought MicroLED were self-emitting and didn't need a backlight?
Micro or mini LED refers to the backlight. You can't have a display with no backlight. The difference between the two is the size of those backlight pixels
Micro led does not have a backlight. mini does. micro is like oled on crack. The cheapest ones you can get are over $100k right now.
@@spicy_mint @TheHaloSkullMaster MiniLED certainly refers to the backlight - I have 2 miniLED displays. I was under the impression that MicroLED pixels are made up of 3 sub-pixel-sized LEDs. They ARE the light, they don't need a backlight.
Perhaps that samsung is a single RGB LED per pixel in that case? When he said "If only there was an RGB one like HiSense (backlit MiniLED)"...I got confused and thought he meant this was also RGB backlit..but that doesn't make sense
@@spicy_mintyou absolutely can have a display with no backlight, those are called OLEDs and they've been a thing for over a decade lol.
@@spinaltap22 If i had to guess I would say the "old" Samsung micro-lED modules were using a blue LED with a phosphor to produce white light, that then went through a colour filter in order to produce the RGB components, where as the last prototype uses R/G/B LED's for each subpixel and can thus produce a higher colour purity (display manufactures would call this direct view). This is all a complete guess though.
As long as TVs keep pushing boundaries, Linus will keep pushing his theater room to match. The evolution is unstoppable-and fascinating to watch!
*Even with the bad economic, My life has totally changed since I started with $5,000 and now I make $78,700 every 14days, I can afford any car or house of my choice right now….,God bless expert Mrs Esther A Berg*
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I know Esther A Berg, and I have also had success...
Absolutely! I have heard stories of people who started with little or no knowledge but managed to emerge victorious thanks to Esther A Berg
I will leave your information below this comment.
Dropping my name in the bucket to be one of the takers of one of the ultimate TVs that got replaced, appreciate you Linus
3:08 Id honestly rather that tech than oled, i know its come a long way but im way too scared of burn in
You won’t beat OLED at the min
@ true
We should thank Chris Nolan when we in 20 years get to watch close ups of Joker's face and purple dress from IMAX source on an 8K RGB MicroLED
1:16 technonogy? typo?
Came here for this lol
and the file is named "miniLED-final-final.jpg"
for the confused ppl who saw RGB microLED and went "wait a minute, arent microLED TVs already RGB?"
yeah apparently RGB microLED is somewhat the same principle as the hisense"RGB mini LED" where they used microLED as backlight for the LCD while on a normal microLED TV just has RGB as pixels with no LCD infront.
stand tall buddy
I always wondered how far we could go if we scrapped all standards for video formats and made a new one emphasizing lessons we learned over time.
3:46 MKBHD Auto Focus intro.
Linus really found the infinite content glitch
Great: high contrast tvs with incredible color so we can watch a bunch of movies with that desaturated color grading. 🤦♂
well yeah, high saturation looks like ass
Man. Linus has really become an expert in acting. He can read a sponsor spot with Gamespot in it without breaking into laughter 😂
No
@@ItsAuraFN Yes
@ no
Time watching movies 200 hours, time upgrading the theater room 2000 hours
Don't care; I don't want a smart TV. I want it dumb as a rock...
you dont have to use the "smart" functions
ok mr 1990
Indeed, just a TV, a powercord and a few HDMI cable inputs with a simple (non-smart) OS. Been using a Nvidia Shield Pro for years now... don't miss the Samsung "smart" functions at all.
I mean Smart TVs are dumb as a rock.
@@theferbd2 you still pay for them...
That 143" 21:9 micro led TV is my dream TV! Can't wait for the prices to eventually trickle down to "entry level" car range from supercar range!
Linus why didn’t u call out honey
he’s explained it twice on wan show
He did on the WAN show
🤦♂️
Get informed
My bad yall
You are going crazy chasing the the "latest and greatest". I keep jumping in for the ride.
Never feel inadequate Linus, I love you.
Linus has probably spent more time on installing tvs instead of actually using them
Patiently waiting for the video where linus links all his massive tvs together to make one giant screen
I've always wondered why display manufacturers didn't use a color backlight. Now I finally have my answer: They wanted to, they just couldn't until now.
I cannot WAIT to see these insane displays start to show up on the market.
Linus, don’t feel like you’re inadequate! Sure you have a great personality to fall back on 🤣.
This is literally two layered screens on top of each other. Wild.
LTT in 2040: "My new TV sucks again. >Company name< 2000 inch 64K TV"
And the neighbors are just green. They say "That's the biggest screen we've ever seen!"
The only guy I know who manages to seamlessly upgrade to a bigger, better sponsored TV every few weeks-legendary!
And then his family mostly watch the normal one in the family room.
I know Linus talked about tv thickness, but can we talk about how clean the bezelless wall tv is at 5:37.
It's like billionaire showcase of super cars... Disregard money, I even don't have physical room to fit it...
Cadillac used the Samsung "lego" like connection microled type panels for their NAIAS (North American International Auto Show) display - they were 25x25 and we had to take them down and place them into pelican type containers fully foamed out for protection and one of the workers dropped one during what we call "tear down" and the price of the monitor was 23,000 dollars. That was back in 2018