- LG TV Line-up 2014-

55"...[lesnumeriques.com]...LG 55EC930V review...http://www.lesnumeriques.com/tv-televiseur/lg-55ec930v-p21259/test.html

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WRGB OLED
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Χμμμ... Διαφορετική η χάραξη του πάνελ φέτος... :chinscratch:

Το περσινό πάνελ:

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55"...[hdtvtest.co.uk]...LG 55EC9300 review...http://www.hdtvtest.co.uk/news/lg-55ec9300-201410203929.htm

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Conclusion

LG’s 55EC9300 offers a tantalizing glimpse into the promise of this outstanding display technology. The simple fact that it’s an OLED display is its biggest selling point: this panel technology bestows it with the best contrast performance we’ve ever seen on an HDTV. It can produce a sometimes incalculable contrast ratio owed to its absolute zero blacks, and can produce eye-searingly bright whites to sit alongside them. No other HDTV on the market, except for Samsung’s discontinued OLED (which cost more than twice LG’s offering) can make this claim. There’s no doubt about it, LG’s aggressive pricing is an absolute game-changer and we hope to see more affordable OLED coming from them soon.

Ultimately, how happy you are with the LG EC9300 depends on for how long you can remain wowed by the contrast performance, because thorough scrutiny reveals a number of issues lurking under the surface. In the hands of a company with a track record of attending to the desires of video enthusiasts – such as Panasonic, and in recent years, Samsung – it would be almost unfathomable that we could be anything less than raving about getting our hands on an OLED display. However, the unfortunate reality is that LG have bungled the video processing which feeds the amazing panel in several ways. Even if the calibration controls didn’t seriously skew some of the colors (therefore defeating their purpose), there is no way we could find to get the LG 55EC9300 to conform to the industry mastering gamma of 2.4 in spite of what the menu says. Even then, this wouldn’t defeat the EC9300′s “behind your back” noise reduction processing, which observant videophile users and film lovers will see as eating away at film grain textures and other fine details such as leaves, tree branches, etc. The fact that the company would deliberately include such a damaging feature does not fill us with confidence.

And confidence is what we need when it comes to LG right now, because as we said at the start of this review, they are the only company taking OLED seriously at this point in time – and for that alone, we congratulate them. Famously, the 55EC9300 came second place in Value Electronics’ 2014 flat panel shootout event in spite of the issues identified in this review. Other review outlets have also sung its praises. Other than the fact that this is probably the (English-speaking) world’s strictest review site, to this journalist personally, it suggests that people are craving affordable better-than-LCD (and better-than-plasma) contrast quality regardless of the other costs – at least in the short term.

The 55EC9300′s problem is that while it currently has the world’s best contrast performance, it is not the first display to do extremely well in this area. OLED contrast performance is on another level compared to the best plasmas, but Panasonic and Samsung’s final PDPs were still better all-round HDTVs, thanks to their very good (but obviously not OLED level) contrast with accurate grayscale, gamma, color, signal integrity, crisper (albeit at times dithered and noisy) motion, and low input lag for interactive usage. The LG EC9300 only excels above them in one of these areas – but wow, does it excel.

As a result, we give the LG 55EC9300 a Recommended rating through gritted teeth. Its multitude of problems left us considering the lower “Qualified Recommendation” but owed to its outstanding and unique contrast performance, its current uniqueness and its revolutionary price, it pulls itself into “Recommended” territory.

One last thing to end this review. About two years before the LG 55EC9300 began shipping, we reviewed a top-end European LCD TV from the company, the 47LM960V. It featured several of the same problems that eventually made it into the EC9300. And we ended that review by saying,

…LG can’t afford to keep shooting themselves in the foot with video processing hiccups. Once again, LG: please, please, please make sure that these quirks don’t cross over to your upcoming 55″ OLED TV – that would be a fairly heartbreaking situation.

Hopefully for the next model, LG will have been reading and will fulfill their OLED promise by pairing these excellent panels up with a similarly excellent video processor. Until that time, the 55EC9300 will dazzle and irritate in unequal measures.


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Τα κακά του να είναι η LG η μοναδική εταιρία που ασχολείται σοβαρά με της OLED.
 
Θελω την γνωμη των ειδικών για την LG 65EC970V (65'' -OLED-CURVED-4K), που προκειται να βγει στην αγορά.

Ευχαριστώ προκαταβολικά.
 
Την 65ec970v μάλλον θα αργήσουμε να τη δούμε. Στην Αμερική όλες οι παραγγελίες πάνε για Δεκέμβριο. Στον Καναδά Μάιο 2015!
Ευρώπη έχουμε μόνο ανακοινώσεις, υποθετικές τιμές και online shops χωρίς stock...
Η Lg Hellas δεν έχει ιδέα για ημερομηνία διάθεσης και ας την έχουν στο site.
Πολύ φοβάμαι ότι θα έχουμε τα ίδια με την 55ea9800 που χρειάστηκε 1-1,5 χρόνο να κυκλοφορήσει.
Από reviews μόνο κάτι ψιλά απο εκθέσεις.
Μετά όμως το review απο το hdtvtest της μικρότερης 55ec930, κρατάω μικρό καλάθι...
 
Το Ιανουάριο του 2015 σταματά η υποστήριξη του WebOS από την HP, που το χρησιμοποιεί και η LG στις τηλεοράσεις της:

http://www.myphone.gr/forum/showthread.php?t=402431

Η LG αγόρασε από την HP το WebOS και συνεχίζει μόνη της την ανάπτυξη και την προσαρμογή του στις συσκευές της. Η απόφαση της HP δεν έχει καμία σχέση με την LG και τις συσκευές που το ενσωματώνουν. Και καλά κάνει δηλαδή μιας και η tv μεταμορφώνεται με το WebOS και δεν έχει καμία σχέση με τα μενού και τα λειτουργικά των άλλων smart tv (εκτός από τις νέες της Philips που τρέχουν android).