A TV With Contrast You Haven’t Seen For Years
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wrote on 8 Mar 2025, 09:13 last edited byThis post did not contain any content.
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This post did not contain any content.wrote on 8 Mar 2025, 10:32 last edited by
Clickbait-ey title
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This post did not contain any content.wrote on 8 Mar 2025, 10:35 last edited by
Unless you have an OLED TV.
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Unless you have an OLED TV.
wrote on 8 Mar 2025, 12:21 last edited byBut OLED can get burn in and degrade over time. This will too, but you can just replace the light bulb.
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But OLED can get burn in and degrade over time. This will too, but you can just replace the light bulb.
wrote on 8 Mar 2025, 12:53 last edited byI've had my OLED since 2017. I use it for gaming. It's perfectly fine still.
Projector bulbs ain't cheap either. And the overall picture quality will still be crap despite the contrast.
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But OLED can get burn in and degrade over time. This will too, but you can just replace the light bulb.
wrote on 8 Mar 2025, 15:18 last edited byThat was once a lot more true than nowadays since the software has ways to mitigate the degradation. Once you’ve gone to a display with true black like OLED, nothing no else compares honestly. They even make movie theater screens look bad.
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Clickbait-ey title
wrote on 8 Mar 2025, 15:20 last edited byA better one would be “A Projector With Contrast You Haven’t Seen For Years.”
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A better one would be “A Projector With Contrast You Haven’t Seen For Years.”
wrote on 8 Mar 2025, 15:33 last edited byIt’s not a projector. It’s an lcd tv screen backlit by a projector. The tv lcd is still what produces the image
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It’s not a projector. It’s an lcd tv screen backlit by a projector. The tv lcd is still what produces the image
wrote on 8 Mar 2025, 15:35 last edited bySo a projector, just like DLP. That’s the backlight technology in this case. Instead of an LCD screen being integrated into the projector itself, it’s on a larger screen in front of it. Same difference as far as lighting technology goes.
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