CES 2012
Four millimeters thin. But not yet for sale.

LG's 55-Inch OLED TV Dan Nosowitz

At the very first press conference of this year's CES, LG started things off by making my (pretty nice!) TV feel like the 32-inch CRT that's in my hotel room. There are precious few details about this guy, including when (or if) it will ever go on sale. But based on my limited time with the screen, crammed in with a hundred other people at the press event, I am very, very impressed.

It's a 55-inch OLED TV, which makes it one of the largest OLED screen in the world (though we're expecting other companies, especially Samsung, to show off equally large OLEDs soon—perhaps even later today). OLED has been traditionally a kind of dream screen technology; blacks are incredibly deep, colors pop, clarity and motion are unparalleled. It's also famously hard to work with, and OLEDs have mostly been restricted so far to small screens, like on some portable devices and the twin tiny screens of Sony's bonkers head-mounted display. OLEDs are expensively difficult to scale up to full TV size, and every year, CES tends to be the showplace for the biggest and best--even if those rarely show up in stores.

LG's as-yet-unnamed-and-unpriced set is a whopping 4mm thick (LG used the almost-correct "Paper Slim" catchphrase, which might not catch on), with a stylishly tiny bezel. It's a very nice-looking set, very high-end. But the picture quality, oh man. Colors are lush, bright and vibrant, motion is crisp but not too crisp, blacks as deep as deep space. LG had a dozen or so of its actually-available-for-purchase top-of-the-line TVs scattered around the stage, but this thing wiped the floor with them.

Will this be the year that large OLED TVs make it to the stores? Probably not for LG: they're giving no word on this set's price, or if it will even see a store shelf at all.

4 Comments

When they bring out a 75 incher I will be interested regardless of the price. That will my media center (Theater TV room) feature set. Astounding OLED will replace all LED's in about 10 years LCD and LED and Plasma will all be obsolete and dead.

This TV looks amazing, but I do worry as to the price. CRT's are horrible, but now they're so cheap..

They still make CRTs? I find that surprising. You can get a nice 42" LCD TV for less than $500. Either way, I really do hope OLED TVs become affordable in the next few years.

to everyone making fun of CRT, stop. they are tough and reliable. i own both an HD and SD crt that blow away any lcd on the market. OLED is the only thing that is worthy of being called "better". oh and "flat tube" crt's were the first flat screen tvs. Sony XBR FTW!!!!!!!!!! "flat panels copied.

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