With all these mobile devices using OLEDs now it honestly shouldn't take too long..
A 4in screen is not the same as a 27in screen, 2 different stories. The market isn't here.
With all these mobile devices using OLEDs now it honestly shouldn't take too long..
A 4in screen is not the same as a 27in screen, 2 different stories. The market isn't here.
No shit.A 4in screen is not the same as a 27in screen, 2 different stories. The market isn't here.
Like taltamir said OLED is going to be much cheaper to produce than LCDs.
Quantum dots are theoretically cheaper to make then the cheapest OLEDs, much less LCDs.
Yes they are.The materials they are made out of are cheaper
Same for OLEDand Samsung's new process is a simple printing process
Also that they have been in development longer and have actual products on the market. I remember thinking "why bother with LED backlit LCD, just jump straight to OLED"... years later and LED backlit LCD rules the market and OLED are just not yet ready.About the only advantage OLEDs have over QDs right now is the screens can be more flexible.
A 4in screen is not the same as a 27in screen, 2 different stories. The market isn't here.
Put 6 in Eyefinity, voila, 24"!!!!! :hmm:![]()
Its about longevity. People don't buy their phones, especially cellphones/smartphones, and expect to use them for years. And by years I mean the better part of a decade. People upgrade their phones too frequently for there to be any concern over screen degradation.
If people threw away their monitors/TVs and upgraded them as frequently as they did their cellphones we'd have OLED for such uses by now.
Samsung has apparently fixed the whole blue OLED problem (and also extended the lifespan of all the colors) in their new SAMSUNG SUPER AMOLED PLUS screens.Hi
Interesting how this thread developed.
First: Forget about those Sony monitors mentioned in the startingpost. Those monitors are made for color correction/ control work in movie postproduction/ TV broadcasting. The customers for those do have that kind of money to burn on a monitor and Sony won't be selling much of those either. I'd be surprised if they actually sold more than 10000 of those units total! Besides: The 23" LCD-based broadcast monitor Sony BVM-L231 costs 19'000 too!
http://www.videocation.com/Sony_Broadcast_LCD_Monitor_BVM-L230_ofr.html
Second: Based on the below post, a Gen5.5 OLED fab can produce 264 4.3" panels or 6 32" panels per single substratesheet. 4.3" panels are simply more costeffective in production than 32" panels, especially since yield rates aren't at 100%. How much more depends on yieldrate. Not to mention that the market for 4.3" panels is probably much bigger thanks to smartphones. So what has to happen to make 32" panels economical in production? New bigger fabs. Currently Samsung has a Gen5.5 fab scheduled to start production in May 2011.
http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?p=19159985#post19159985
There are still serious issues to be solved for OLED. Lifespan of the blue OLEDs is still much lower than red and green (which don't have a very high lifetime themselves, a few 10000 hours until brightness falls below 50% isn't really impressive). Powerdelivery is also problematic on bigger panels. Transparent materials generally aren't good electrical conductors and a few thousand nontransparent wires within the panel will create a very noticable screendoor effect. Keep in mind that most of the power current LCDs consume is for the backlight (the inverter needed for CCFL backlight has a pretty low efficiency too) and backlight doesn't need transparent wires. With OLED all the power needed has to go through the panel itself, with most of the wires having high specific resistance much of this power is just heating up the panel. Add to this, that the organic materials in OLEDs are much more sensitive to temperature than anything in LCDs.
Don't get me wrong. I'd like to buy OLED based monitors and TVs but I don't see them coming for reasonable prices anytime soon.
OLED screens destroy TN panels and IPS panel for gaming and everything else also.Asus TN panels are great. I have one and a S-IPS and have no problem with the TN. I wouldn't bother with an IPS if I were buying today. Or worry about OLED.
Go buy one then.
I use plasma tvs and LCD monitors for PC. Very happy.
You'll be much happier once OLED replaces them both however.Go buy one then.
I use plasma tvs and LCD monitors for PC. Very happy.
Samsung has apparently fixed the whole blue OLED problem (and also extended the lifespan of all the colors) in their new SAMSUNG SUPER AMOLED PLUS screens.
Lord knows what Sony has figured out with the NGP..