Addressing the Biggest Weakness of LG Display’s Next-Generation OLED Panels

Addressing the Biggest Weakness of LG Display’s Next-Generation OLED Panels


This ​year, LG Display came to CES 2024 with something to‌ prove. It had multiple sizes of transparent OLEDs (the show’s theme appears ‌to ⁣be transparent‍ displays)​ and ‍a⁢ gaming monitor capable‌ of 480Hz refresh rates – double what we’re used to seeing. Perhaps the most interesting things at its showroom⁤ were LG Display’s most advanced ⁢OLED panels yet, featuring⁣ its META technology 2.0. While it sounds like promotional⁢ fluff (and there’s some of that here),⁢ the company is trying‍ to address arguably OLED’s biggest weakness.

While the company revealed its ‍META technology last year, version ​2.0 features‍ advanced microlens arrays⁢ (now ‍called MLA+). ⁣These are micrometer-sized⁢ lenses with a Dragonfly eye design‍ that⁣ improves the viewing angle of OLED⁣ displays up to 160 degrees. These lenses (and there are 42.4 billion⁢ of them in LG Display’s 83-inch 4K prototype), combined with new algorithms result‌ in an OLED far⁣ more brighter ​than its predecessors – 42 percent⁤ brighter than…

2024-01-09​ 16:29:37
Source from www.engadget.com rnrn

This year, LG Display came to CES 2024 with something to prove. It had multiple sizes of transparent‍ OLEDs (the show’s ⁢theme appears to be transparent displays) and a gaming monitor capable of 480Hz refresh rates – double what we’re used to seeing. Perhaps the most interesting things ⁤at its showroom were​ LG Display’s‌ most ‍advanced OLED panels‍ yet,⁢ featuring⁤ its META technology​ 2.0. While it sounds like promotional fluff (and there’s some of that here), the company is trying to address arguably OLED’s biggest ​weakness.

While the company revealed its META technology ⁣last year, version ⁤2.0 features advanced microlens arrays (now called MLA+). These are micrometer-sized lenses⁢ with a‍ Dragonfly eye design that improves the viewing angle ⁣of OLED displays up to 160 degrees. These ​lenses ⁢(and there are ‌42.4 billion of them in LG Display’s⁣ 83-inch 4K ‌prototype), combined‍ with new ‍algorithms result in an OLED far more brighter than its predecessors – 42 percent brighter than…

2024-01-09 16:29:37
Source from www.engadget.com rnrn

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