Hands-on review: CES 2015: Samsung JS9500 SUHD 4K TV ,
Five years ago, the television market was fought in inches. It generally came down to who could make the largest panel, who could make it at a reasonable price and, most importantly, after all that stretching which one looked the best.At CES 2015, Samsung's not fighting a war with inches. It's fighting it in nanometers.Why? Quantum Dot technology, the newest buzzword in the home entertainment world. Though it's not calling it quantum dot... it's calling it SUHD.For the plain and simple, QD panels are brighter, more vivid and mor eaccurate with colours than standard LCD LED but not quite as dazzling or contrast rich as OLED.
Why is something from the 80s making a comeback? Simple. Quantum Dot gives TVs a 30% boost in colour accuracy and 64 times more color gradation to every pixel than standard LCD LED sets.The panel itself, at least on the upcoming JS9500 model recently shown to TechRadar at a pre-showing event, is 10-bit with DCI-P3 standards and "makes color adjustments at twice the normal speed of other UHD screens," says Bill Lee, vice president of Television Product Marketing at Samsung.Simply said, the colour on it was downright spectacular as shades of reds, greens, blues and blacks lit illuminated the outdoor venue. It's getting harder and harder for UHD to impress me, but the JS9500 still found a way.Just be sure to note that Lee said the TV will "make color adjustments," and not "refreshes at" twice the normal speed. Just if and how Samsung's latest innovation keeps up with the on-screen action is still a real discussion point and wasn't something shown during press demos.
If that's not enough, it'll be powered via an all-new open-source OS developed by Tizen. Not only will the typical smart-OS functions be there, but the TV will use low-power Bluetooth to search and sync up to five Samsung mobile devices without you having to lift a finger.An example Lee gave me during an interview was setting an alarm on your phone that will play through the TV. Of course pushing content from a phone or tablet to your TV will be a simple task and Tizen OS will work as a quasi-personal assistant when not directly serving you the latest episode of Game of Thrones.
from www.techradar.comSource : http://hightech-net.blogspot.com/2015/01/hands-on-review-ces-2015-samsung-js9500.html