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Sony's Color Boost: The New RGB LED Challenge
Tuesday, March 18, 2025
Sony's advanced backlight control technology is another key player here. It dynamically allocates power to each RGB channel based on the scene, ensuring that the luminance is in harmony with color gradation. This prevents the concentration of light on bright elements, which can lead to flat, lifeless images. Instead, it delivers nuanced hues and detailed images, even in single-tone scenes like a deep blue sky. This technology allows for "delicate, nuanced hues even on large displays, " as Sony puts it.
Brightness is another area where this new technology shines. It boasts peak levels exceeding 4, 000 nits, a benchmark typically seen in professional reference monitors. This high brightness, combined with its ability to maintain color accuracy and saturation, makes it a strong contender against OLEDs. Additionally, it offers better support for wider viewing angles, a weakness of traditional mini-LEDs, which often lose saturation or develop a green tint at extreme angles.
While this technology is a Sony innovation, it's not exclusive to Sony TVs. Hisense has already shown its potential in one of its models, indicating its scalability and potential affordability for larger screens. If RGB LEDs can achieve faster response times for gaming, they could become a long-term replacement for OLEDs, much like OLEDs once surpassed plasma technology. Sony is working with partners like MediaTek to bring this technology to mass production this year, with plans to integrate it into both consumer TVs and professional content creation displays.
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