LAS VEGAS -- Where's TV tech going next?indian aunties sex videos If there's one place to find out, it's CES, the yearly Las Vegas show where nearly all the electronics manufacturers bring their wares. But for the last couple of years, TV manufacturers have looked a bit aimless, jumping from one new tech to another, but never quite managing to extend their enthusiasm about that new tech to consumers.
There is a clear trend, though, one that reached new heights this year: the TV itself is getting out of the way. The TVs we've seen have gotten so thin, the bezels so small, that it's possible to turn some TVs into wallpaper -- an almost-floating image that sits a few millimeters from the wall.
SEE ALSO: LG's new 4K TV is thinner than an iPhoneLG's new OLED, 4K TVs are thinner than an iPhone at their thinnest points, and its bezels, while not quite non-existent, are ridiculously small. Other companies, such as Philips and Samsung, have introduced TVs with similarly small footprints -- and we're not talking about small television sets, we're talking 70-inch (and larger) behemoths, which makes their tiny bezels all the more impressive.
And LG even went a step further, showing off a concept of a transparent TV. It might not be very practical -- after all, you rarely want to see what's behind the picture -- but it's another aspect of the TV being removed. We're moving towards the future when the TV will indeed just be an image floating in the air.
Of course, most of those devices, with all the tech they're packing, will cost upwards of $10,000. But Xiaomi has shown an ultra-thin smart TV that costs less than 2,000 bucks, meaning these nearly-invisible, super-thin TVs are becoming available to a lot more people.
The trend is not new; TVs have been getting thinner ever since the first one hit the market. And manufacturers will point out the incredible array of technologies built into these things -- super high resolutions, nano cells, HDR (which is probably the most important of the lot, as it really makes the viewing experience a lot better) and quantum dots.
But I still feel the most noticeable (and the most welcome) trend is the traditional TV set disappearing, leaving only the picture behind. I'm not very excited about the next three-letter TV tech acronym, but I can't wait to see the next trick manufacturers pull to make their screens thinner, and bezels smaller.
Topics CES Samsung Xiaomi
Deloitte's CEO gave her 15How to make Australian trolls angry: Tell them their country isn't realPizza guy rescues lost dog during cutest food delivery everI am so unreasonably jealous of this view of the southern lightsStephen Hawking gave a speech via hologram. Again.'She's not waking up:' Boy saves mom using Siri to call ambulanceI am so unreasonably jealous of this view of the southern lightsTurns out, that viral website where kittens attack Trump may have trolled us allPeople don't care who wrote a news story, but they do care who shared it on FacebookHow MealPal plans to outlive the subscription service hypeThere's more controversy about Netflix's 'Death Note'Trump driving a truck becomes the internet's new favorite metaphor for America'Fixer Upper' is giving fans exactly what they wanted: A new spinoffMashTalk: Will the new electronics ban affect your travel plans?Ethereum: The notCan the CIA hack your iPhone? What you need to know about the WikiLeaks dump.In defense of ghosting: It's nothing personal'Game of Thrones' wine will have to hold us over until Season 7's premiereFans are obsessing over this image of Hailey Baldwin sitting on the toiletEthereum: The not The History of English in Ten Minutes, Dystopian Dream Books, and Other News Pulitzers, Saints, and Camera Obscura! by Sadie Stein Salter’s Armory by Jenny Hendrix Robert Hayden’s “Summertime and the Living...” by D. A. Powell The Pilgrim Trail by Sadie Stein Staff Picks: Sexual Humiliation, Advanced Style by The Paris Review Adrienne Rich by Robyn Creswell Dear Don Draper, I Think I Understand by Adam Wilson Happy Birthday, Gatsby; Good Terry Winters by Yevgeniya Traps Dear Peggy Olson, Nice to Meet You by Adam Wilson 314 Bedford by Christopher Bollen Mapping Markson by Sadie Stein Bookmobiles of the World by Sadie Stein Join Us This Thursday! by The Paris Review The Regulars by Josh Dzieza Bookitecture by Sadie Stein The Magnetic Fields Tour Diary, Part 3 by Emma Straub Who Needs the Pulitzer? We’ve Got Joshua Cohen! by The Paris Review Underground Colonies by Will Hunt
2.0865s , 10520.6015625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【indian aunties sex videos】,Prosperous Times Information Network