By Stewart RicePosted Tuesday 13th May 2008 10:41 GMT
So all you do is vacuum pack the OLED panel before you fit it into whatever frame, and that would increase it's lifespan.
Hummm... what other uses might there be for such a breakthough? Imagine the possiblities for vacuum-packing organic objects to preserve their freshness...
By Anonymous CowardPosted Tuesday 13th May 2008 11:34 GMT
"allegations that its state-of-the-art OLED TV, the XEL-1, has a fraction of the longevity the manufacturer claims it has"
Perhaps they should state whether these allegations are proper or improper as that has a significant effect on the implications ... in any case they are, by definition, vulgar!
By Stuart HallidayPosted Tuesday 13th May 2008 11:35 GMT
As I understand it OLED slowly degrades _continuously_, so it doesn't matter if they're on or off.
If I bought a OLED TV then at 9 hours a day for 5 years gives me 16425 hours. Just in time to buy a new one running S-HDTV?
But if it is continuously degrading then that's 17,000 hours or 1.94 years.
Pity they didn't do a brightness test on a 3rd OLED TV that was only switched on briefly at the start and the finish of the test so we'd have some basis for comparison.
By David GosnellPosted Tuesday 13th May 2008 11:48 GMT
At least the fraction in question here is slightly more credible than Sainsbury's - who are currently advertising home insurance for a fraction of the usual cost, where the fraction in question is 3/4. "Vast majority" would be a more accurate term. Sorry, IMO a fraction needs to be 1/3 or less to be called such colloquially.
By brainwrongPosted Tuesday 13th May 2008 13:17 GMT
"during the 1000-hour test period, the ability of the two screens to display blue had degraded by 12 per cent. A seven per cent drop was recorded for red and an eight per cent decline for green."
Never mind the drop in brightness, surely the colour balance will be all out of goose.
By Christopher E. StithPosted Tuesday 13th May 2008 14:59 GMT
It's easy to get the total time wrong if you're assuming a constant linear fade rather than a front-loaded curve that starts to flatten (or the other way around). I think the measurement and graph plotting methods need to be made along with any claims such as this.
Comments on: Sony OLED TV longevity claim challenged
Nothing new #
By Joe K Posted Tuesday 13th May 2008 10:32 GMT
So... #
By Stewart Rice Posted Tuesday 13th May 2008 10:41 GMT
vulgar allegations #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Tuesday 13th May 2008 11:34 GMT
OLED slowly degrades continuously #
By Stuart Halliday Posted Tuesday 13th May 2008 11:35 GMT
Re: vulgar allegations #
By David Gosnell Posted Tuesday 13th May 2008 11:48 GMT
Colour #
By brainwrong Posted Tuesday 13th May 2008 13:17 GMT
still want one #
By richard Posted Tuesday 13th May 2008 13:31 GMT
Seepage #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Tuesday 13th May 2008 13:54 GMT
linear drop or a curve? #
By Christopher E. Stith Posted Tuesday 13th May 2008 14:59 GMT
Hmmm #
By heystoopid Posted Tuesday 13th May 2008 19:30 GMT
blueshift?? #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Tuesday 13th May 2008 22:54 GMT