Samsung Display to Unveil New Diamond Pixel Display Technology

Samsung Display shows a unique new Diamond Pixel

Samsung Display is about to unveil their latest display technology at the Society for Information Display’s Display Week 2013, May 21-23, 2013, in the Vancouver. According to a press release, these new products include: a Full HD (1920×1080) mobile AMOLED display with the world’s broadest color gamut, and an 85-inch Ultra HD (3840×2160) LCD TV panel with extremely vivid color and low power consumption.

The Korean Electronic giant is also set to showcase their unique new Diamond Pixel display technology at the show. The feature enables enables local-dimming control in direct LED-based LCD panels.

According to Samsung Display, the new Diamond Pixel™ technology will allow for the most advanced mobile AMOLED display demands. The company is looking to produce the world’s first mass-produced 4.99-inch Full HD mobile AMOLED display, which will offer the broadest color gamut with a 94 percent average rate of reproduction for the Adobe RGB color space.

In addition, the new Diamond Pixel technology will provide the following enhancements over current offerings:

  • With Diamond Pixel technology, Full HD AMOLED display can provide text messages 2.2 times clearer than HD (1280×720) displays. So, when curvilinear letters on the panel are magnified two or three times, Samsung’s Diamond Pixel™ technology enables text to be reproduced more smoothly (fewer “jaggies”) and accurately than those produced with conventional LCD technology.
  • The technology is based on the idea that the human retina reacts more to green than other colors, places more green than red and blue pixels in the pixel structure of AMOLED display panels.

Samsung Display shows a unique new Diamond Pixel

Furthermore, Samsung Display will be showcasing the following:

  • An 85-inch ultra HD TV panel showcases a LCD technology that enables local-dimming control in a direct LED-based LCD panel. The panel can save 30 percent of typical LED BLU power consumption. Its local-dimming control enables vivid color rendering including incredible black images, 80 percent brightness uniformity, and a remarkably-enhanced contrast ratio.
  •  A 10.1-inch WQXGA (2560 x 1600) LCD for tablets and a 13.3-inch WQXGA+ (3200 x 1800) LCD for notebooks, which each can deliver 30 percent greater power-savings than that of existing LCD tablet displays, by decreasing the number of driver circuits and increasing the efficiency of the LED BLU.
  • A 23-inch multi-touch LCD display that can detect 10 touch points simultaneously. The prototype enables playing of the piano with exceptional finesse, or drawing a highly detailed picture on a monitor or a tablet.

Source

Posted by | Posted at May 20, 2013 10:14 | Tags: , , ,
Storm is a technology enthusiast, who resides in the UK. He enjoys reading and writing about technology.

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