Not just OLED monitors, but the mini LED monitors are also getting frequent upgrades, and with the introduction of RGB mini LED, we are going to see an incredible visual quality.
Hisense Debuts 32UX As the World's First RGB Mini LED Monitor, Bringing Full-Color Backlighting at $1475
Hisense has introduced what it calls the world's first RGB mini-LED monitor, a technology it appears to have brought from premium TVs to the desktop monitor. This brings a 32-inch display, boasting a resolution of 4K, and at a decent refresh rate of 180 Hz. This positions it as a high-end gaming monitor rather than just a mainstream display, and here's what has been reported about the new model.
Since the monitor uses RGB mini LED, the biggest difference will be the backlight, as conventional LCD monitors use a white or blue LED backlight, but the RGB mini LED doesn't. Conventional monitors rely on filters, quantum dots, and phosphor conversion for red, green, and blue output, but Mini LED improves on this by shrinking the LEDs and adding many dimming zones, boosting contrast and brightness.
RGB Mini LED goes further by using the red, green, and blue mini LEDs in the backlight itself. This means we are going to see more than just a boost in contrast or brightness, and the Hisense 32UX brings up to 2000 nits of peak brightness. RGB Mini LED can contribute color more directly, improving the color volume and allowing richer HDR details compared to conventional Mini LED monitors. The stronger brightness will be its most practical benefit, but we should also see more saturated HDR colors and better details in bright environments.
Overall, the Hisense 32UX looks ideal for both gaming and content creation users who want OLED-like performance without OLED burn-in concerns. As far as the specifications are concerned, not much has been shared, but considering it's a 4K 32-inch 180 Hz display, it's going to be an attractive option for immersive gaming. The monitor launched at 9,999 Yuan, which is around US$1,475. So, it's not a cheap monitor by any means and costs even higher than most high-end QD-OLED 4K gaming monitors in the market.
News Source: @realVictor_M
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