


OLED sets also cut down on light spillage in scenes where bright and dark colours are side by side, which means you see sharper contrast. That means images can have truly black areas, rather than just very dark. Pixels, the individual points that form an image, are self-illuminating in OLEDs and can be shut off individually. Samsung's gigantic new 146 inch The Wall TV (pictured) is the first to use the technology Manufacturers say MicroLEDs are brighter than OLEDs and offer the same benefits of high contrast and deep blacks, without burn-in. With an 8K TV, the screen resolution is 7680 x 4320 pixels – or 33 million pixels in total. This adds up to approximately two million pixels. That's 1920 pixels along the bottom, and 1080 up the side. A standard set has a resolution of 1920 x 1080 pixels. 'When you get to this resolution it delivers almost a quasi-virtual reality experience as your eyes perceive there to be depth to the content.'įull HD TVs have been used in most households since 2007. These displays are incredibly impressive in person - even 8K on a big display is almost mesmerising. 'We're moving slowly towards 8K TVs at the end of the decade and who knows how long it will take to get beyond that, so 16K is likely to be limited to the corporate world for the time being,' David Mercer from the consultancy Strategy Analytics told BBC news. While we won't be seeing these monster TV's in our homes just yet, 8K TV's are now becoming more and more available.Īlthough it will be years before native 8K content is widely available for us to view. The display technology is so rare, Sony had to make its own film for Shiseido. The electronics giant made the announcement that it would be open to the public 'soon' at the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) trade show in Las Vegas. Sony had previously designed a 16K display that went on show at Tokyo's Haneda Airport in 2014, but it had the appearance of dozens of smaller screens rather than presenting a single picture.īecause the display technology is so rare, it is difficult to make content, so Sony had to make its own film for Shiseido showing life-size animal wildlife.Īt the new building, 'Shiseido Global Innovation Center',they will be offering an 'experience-based communication space where visitors can get inspired by beauty'. Using crystal LED technology allows them to use multiple panels together as if they are one single display.

The BBC reported that the screen is expected to be so big that it will stretch between the first and second floors of the building.Īlthough the size looks impressive, it is not one single display.

The screen is being set up at a new research centre owned by Japanese cosmetics group Shiseido, in Yokohama Sony is installing a 16K 'super resolution' television screen which measures a whopping 63ft by 17ft (19.2m by 5.4m) in Japan.
