That’s all well and good, but without any formal announcement on who, exactly, is going to make and distribute these TVs outside of Sony, it all feels a bit theoretical at this point. The deeper saturation allows the TVs to have better off-axis viewing angles than LED-LCD and higher luminance than basic OLED screens. QD-OLED removes the white sub-pixel entirely and combines a blue self-emitting layer with a Quantum Dot layer to create more saturated colors. While OLED TVs have been delivering phenomenal contrast levels for years, they've always struggled to produce the best color saturation as their use of a white sub-pixel and lack of light output hampers the ability to get the deepest range of color. (Opens in a new window) 899.99 (List Price 1,099.99) 65' Amazon Omni Series 4K HDR Smart Fire TV. The announcement of Samsung’s intent to distribute its QD-OLED panels also includes information on its recent SGS certification for True Color Tones, Pure RGB Luminance, and Ultrawide Viewing Angle - three major strengths of the new technology. 75' Amazon Omni QLED Series 4K HDR Smart Fire TV.
Analysis: Better TVs are coming - we just don’t know from who yet…