*My LOVE HATE relationship with my LG G2 OLED...* After a bunch of firmware updates, there are THREE main issues that I think ALL OLED's have? #1) JUDDER (quick stutter) - I constantly have to switch between a typical setting for most movies/TV that has minimal SMOOTHING and one that adds a lot of SMOOTHING to fix judder in some content (particularly anime/cartoons for some reason). I'll start watching a MOVIE and it feels weird and I'm like "oh, yeah, I have motion smoothing cranked up" (and movies STILL have judder at times that's worse than Plasma/LCD even on the default setting) #2) judder on PART of screen. Not sure what to call it, but it seems like BRIGHT parts of the screen will look like they are stuttering in motion relative to the rest of the screen. It's hard to NOT notice it. #3) ghosting (reverse ghosting?). It's not really "ghosting" but, for example, if someone walks in front of a really bright, white WALL I'll see a thick OUTLINE around the character that moves with them. It's frikking annoying. It's a video processing issue likely to overcome limitations in OLED brightness or whatever, so it might not be an issue on new OLEDs. *Conversely, my dad's old Panasonic Plasma TV (2007?) still has a great picture. They NEVER have to touch a single setting. It just works. I would actually rather have his TV because for MOST content even the video quality isn't that much different. And I have all the above issues. **What really pisses me off is that nobody mentioned all this in the many, many REVIEWS i looked at when doing research in 2022 or so.
Photonboy999 comment here is right on.I too still have a ten year old plasma that gives me immense satisfaction viewing.Oled picture measurement is superior in digital realm.But the brain sees a continuum And Plasma still rules👍
I got two Oled tv. A Phillips 908 that has MLA technology and a LG C4 as a gaming monitor. The Phillips 908 has better image and it’s brighter, to be honest my living room has three windows and the image still looks fine during day time. For gaming the MLA screen is brighter and colours look much better than my LG C4 but having G-sync on my LG is a game changer for pc gaming. The Phillips is amazing living room tv and plays just as good as the LG. But for movies the Phillips is next level and it comes with the best sound on a tv I ever seen. The freaking tv has a subwoofer built into the back of the oled tv and a soundbar built into the tv.
just wait for samsung to release a new firmware with a new reduced brightness (to reverse the diodes burnout) and talk again which is better samsung or lg...
If u are looking at 2017 oleds. Just the 2018 LG C8 OLED is good for 100,000 hours. Mine looks new, looks better than my new Sasmsung neo mini LED and it will probably look new in 5 years when it's just used out in the shed.
Might still be a concern if using as a desktop monitor, but it's a non-issue for newer OLEDs, or even ones a few years old. RTings can easily produce IMAGE RETENTION on most OLEDs but they also intentionally do worst-case scenarios to stress the TV's in unreasonable ways. Also, they showed that BACKLIGHTS on LCD panels can fail and degrade as well. So basically you can't generalize. You need to do research on specific models.
People still buy Smart TV's? I would rather just stream to a large quality PC monitor without any proprietary bloatware/malware "interface" embedded into it.
*My LOVE HATE relationship with my LG G2 OLED...*
After a bunch of firmware updates, there are THREE main issues that I think ALL OLED's have?
#1) JUDDER (quick stutter) - I constantly have to switch between a typical setting for most movies/TV that has minimal SMOOTHING and one that adds a lot of SMOOTHING to fix judder in some content (particularly anime/cartoons for some reason). I'll start watching a MOVIE and it feels weird and I'm like "oh, yeah, I have motion smoothing cranked up" (and movies STILL have judder at times that's worse than Plasma/LCD even on the default setting)
#2) judder on PART of screen. Not sure what to call it, but it seems like BRIGHT parts of the screen will look like they are stuttering in motion relative to the rest of the screen. It's hard to NOT notice it.
#3) ghosting (reverse ghosting?). It's not really "ghosting" but, for example, if someone walks in front of a really bright, white WALL I'll see a thick OUTLINE around the character that moves with them. It's frikking annoying. It's a video processing issue likely to overcome limitations in OLED brightness or whatever, so it might not be an issue on new OLEDs.
*Conversely, my dad's old Panasonic Plasma TV (2007?) still has a great picture. They NEVER have to touch a single setting. It just works. I would actually rather have his TV because for MOST content even the video quality isn't that much different. And I have all the above issues.
**What really pisses me off is that nobody mentioned all this in the many, many REVIEWS i looked at when doing research in 2022 or so.
Photonboy999 comment here is right on.I too still have a ten year old plasma that gives me immense satisfaction viewing.Oled picture measurement is superior in digital realm.But the brain sees a continuum
And Plasma still rules👍
I got two Oled tv. A Phillips 908 that has MLA technology and a LG C4 as a gaming monitor. The Phillips 908 has better image and it’s brighter, to be honest my living room has three windows and the image still looks fine during day time. For gaming the MLA screen is brighter and colours look much better than my LG C4 but having G-sync on my LG is a game changer for pc gaming. The Phillips is amazing living room tv and plays just as good as the LG. But for movies the Phillips is next level and it comes with the best sound on a tv I ever seen. The freaking tv has a subwoofer built into the back of the oled tv and a soundbar built into the tv.
O in OLED stands for Organic
Waiting for E LED, which E stands for Eternal
just wait for samsung to release a new firmware with a new reduced brightness (to reverse the diodes burnout) and talk again which is better samsung or lg...
Oled is the best
Absolutely especially QD OLED I never seen nice rich colorful clean crisp image then on QD OLED
Using Lg display panels....
Yea LG makes WOLED panels and Samsung makes the QD OLEDs Sony buys from em in there OLEDs
I'd avoid OLED because it doesn't last as long as LED.
If u are looking at 2017 oleds. Just the 2018 LG C8 OLED is good for 100,000 hours. Mine looks new, looks better than my new Sasmsung neo mini LED and it will probably look new in 5 years when it's just used out in the shed.
@@tbone5654 - Shed TV...interesting. Watch TV while sharpening the lawnmower blade.
You don't know what your talking about.
@@marvel764 - Regarding electronics, I qualify expert.
Might still be a concern if using as a desktop monitor, but it's a non-issue for newer OLEDs, or even ones a few years old. RTings can easily produce IMAGE RETENTION on most OLEDs but they also intentionally do worst-case scenarios to stress the TV's in unreasonable ways.
Also, they showed that BACKLIGHTS on LCD panels can fail and degrade as well.
So basically you can't generalize. You need to do research on specific models.
This guy fuqs
Horrible review!
People still buy Smart TV's? I would rather just stream to a large quality PC monitor without any proprietary bloatware/malware "interface" embedded into it.
avoid oled at all cost
It's the best
@@Matowix
Even Oled is the best,there are plenty of reasons to avoid it ,just my choice😜
@@strpyw1 no body cares oled for the win
@@strpyw1why burn in? I’m happy with my 3 year warranty. Using it 12 hours a day