Examples of using Microled in English and their translations into Vietnamese
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
So what about MicroLED?
Can MicroLED compete with LCD and OLED?
Samsung isn't the only company looking into MicroLED.
MicroLED is a new flat-screen display technology.
Samsung shrinks The Wall MicroLED modular TV down to 75 inches at CES.
MicroLED is the first new screen tech in a decade.
Next Apple reportedly invests in its own MicroLED screens.
On the downside, MicroLED is currently limited to very large screen applications.
The tech giant is investingheavily in the development screens of the next generation MicroLED.
Samsung first debuted its MicroLED technology at last year's CES with a massive, 146-inch TV that was appropriately called The Wall.
According to the report from Bloomberg,Apple is designing and producing first time its own MicroLED device displays.
The main advantage of microLED is that it should be more power-efficient, which could mean the Apple Watch 6 would have better battery life.
The Samsung Wall got a lot of oohs andahhs when it unveiled"the world's first consumer modular MicroLED 146-inch TV.".
The exciting thing about MicroLED is that it is also an emissive display, but unlike OLED, it doesn't rely on organic compounds to make light.
In 2018 Samsung's engineers told CNET's David Katzmaier that thecurrent focus was on making a 4K-resolution MicroLED TV that's smaller than 146 inches.
Samsung is almost ready to start selling microLED TVs that use individual LEDs for each pixel, which should theoretically deliver black levels on par with OLED.
In order to increase market share in the high-end segment, Samsung is committed to adoptinga“parallel” strategy when covering both QLED and MicroLED TV products.
Digitimes says that the companyis partnering with TSMC to help bring microLED to market, with the creation of micro LED panels on silicon back-planes.
MicroLED is the first new screen tech to come out in over a decade, and while it's nowhere near ready for mass production that doesn't stop it from being fascinating.
Apple plans to expand its use of OLED screens until MicroLED is ready for market, going from one iPhone model to two and adding LG as a second supplier alongside Samsung.
Apple also created its own Face ID system, acquired the maker of its Touch ID system, andit was recently reported to be secretly developing its own MicroLED screens for the Apple Watch.
Samsung started showcasing MicroLED last year with The Wall, and at CES 2019 it unveiled a 75-inch 4K MicroLED TV that could fit in countless front room.
In March 2018 Bloomberg reported that Apple was making andtesting MicroLED screens, at a secret facility in California, for possible use in future product updates.
The MicroLED manufacturing process is said to be“extraordinarily complex,” as millions of individual pixels each have red, green, and blue sub-pixels that must be individually created and calibrated.
We have also seen two concepts that go a step further-one that uses a MicroLED panel for a backlight, and another with an LED backlight consisting of around 10,000 zones that can be lit individually.
MicroLED essentially combines the LCD and LED components of a typical television(and it shrinks everything way down) to create a display where the pixels emit their own light in a way that's very similar to OLED.
Apple is using a secret facility in California to develop MicroLED screens for the Apple Watch and iPhone, Bloomberg reports, with plans to replace third-party OLED screens in several years.
MicroLED, in the case of this TV, means“it is a self-emitting TV with micrometer-scale LEDs- which are much smaller than current LEDs, and serve as their own source of light,” Samsung says.
This is a separate technology from QLED TVs, so it won't factor in here,but based on what we saw at CES 2019, MicroLED has the potential to bring its own serious competition to OLED in the not-so-distant future, especially with regards to brightness and black levels.
Apple is working on curved displays, perhaps related to the MicroLED development, which would curve inward from the top of the device to the bottom, unlike Samsung's curved displays, which round out at the sides.