Love that cool transparent screen, reminds me of holodeck or hologram of Star Trek. I love seeing LG come up with cool new things and thankful for taking a risk on making OLEDs 10 years ago while Samsung didn’t see a future for it. It reminds me of Panasonic Plasma tv that my parents and I had for as first HDTV back in 2008.
As always, great presentation from our favorite host. As for the transparent TV, I agree with most here that it’s use is going to be limited-think not much value added to home entertainment, yet. But for professional and commercial use it has a lot of value. An ability to present information without the need to sacrifice surface area real estate is pretty cool. Military, corporate, and educational environments are some places that could greatly benefit from this type of technology.
This was my first thought until I realized that I always put my TVs against the windows, to minimize glare, and the downside obviously is that it cuts out a lot of the sunlight coming into the living room. But if I can just leave the TV on a transparent screen-saver while not in use, I can probably get a lot of that light back into the room and just turn the black back on whenever I actually want to use the TV. I'm guessing it won't have any of the features I'd actually want in a TV yet, like 120hz VRR. But it sounds pretty promising!
Another wonderful CES video from Caleb Denison!! This time, with LG TV offerings. The transparent TV is very interesting! It would be cool to place it in front of a window so it doesn’t obscure the view when the tv is off or the dark film is lowered. Other than the novelty, I am not sure I see the usefulness, given the probable price point. .
Not sure if LG plans on making transparent OLEDs at broad scale but would love to see a more budget version that foregoes the wireless box - a 'CT' of sorts. This style of TV sounds great for apartment living - no glare and a freed up wall!
Any word if that tabletop stand will be backward compatible to the LG G3? The aftermarket stuff isn’t ideal, so this would be a nice addition. Thanks for the updates!!
Looking forward to see what else can be done with transparent OLED + Micro LED tech. Right now it’s being demoed in TVs, but who knows where else it could show up? Maybe on other products; maybe even cars.
No stand with g4 77 inch sucks, I expect it can be purchased for the 77 inch? Wonder what the clearance is on it, if it works with a Sonos arc soundbar. Also wondering if the C4 has the same stand as the C3 or if it has better clearance for a soundbar in front.
LG SIGNATURE OLED T è una vera meraviglia tecnologica, che combina uno schermo OLED 4K trasparente e video e audio wireless di LG. tecnologia di trasmissione per trasformare l'esperienza sullo schermo in modi che non erano mai stati possibili prima. 🎉
I would say the 76 inch MicroLED has been the biggest TV highlight. The fact that they have been able to put micro LED in a 76 inch screen is mind blowing. I didn’t expect that for at least a few years but here we are
The G4 looks legit, not sure how much of an Upgrade it's gonna be over the G3, but probably more than the S95D that looks exactly Like the S95C but with Matte coating which takes away that Pop.
The marketing content mistakenly shows dark opacity in front of brightly lit walls, which would be impossible without an opacifying matrix behind the OLED... but I suppose an additional LCD matrix behind the OLED would reduce the transparency effect by half. The marketing content mistakenly shows dark opacity in front of brightly lit walls, which I believe would be impossible in this current form (hence why they need a black film sheet that slides around behind)
While in comes to TV technology,LG is pioneering and having much more contribution for innovation.Still it is underdog in industry.Just they have many more top technology inventions such as IPS,OLED panels ,Rolling displays and many more
@@robertt9342 You're looking at it as if it were a typical TV and only meant for that. It would be a décor screen, such an application wouldn't be for you to stand in front of it and watch the latest movie or TV show for hours on end. Also, a window isn't bright 24/7.
I have a nearly new G3 77, it still has the protective layer on the screen. I really want the 83 with MLA. Where does a person go to sell a near new TV?
2nd generation mla is interesting already. I'm a bit sad I just got a 77inch g3 and these are now 144hz but 120hz is still fine and I got the 77inch G3 for the C3 discount price due to error 😂👌
The thing that could make this cool is if they made it so you were able to use it as an actual window and still not have the direct sunlight cause problems for the tv in regards to heating or any light leakage through the black film layer. Then you could use it as a window and a tv that doesn’t take up any extra space by just raising and lowering the film. That is the only real way I think this would be useful in the residential setting besides a little novelty.
"use it as an actual window?" Yeah, that would be called the REAL WINDOW that is already in your house. And the "pretend" fish tank? Yep that's called a REAL fish tank with REAL fish.......How stupid are people to buy into this nonsense that is being sold?
@@steveludwig4200 I think you missed the point. You could use it as a regular window whenever the TV is not on. And you could roll up the black film layer and use it as a TV when you wanted to watch it. That way it just looks pretty much like and functions like a window when not being viewed but also works as a tv that doesn’t take up any space when watching tv. That was my point. Obviously right now I doubt that would work since direct sunlight would probably overheat the tv and would probably not be completely blocked by the black film layer. Obviously, it would still be a product for rich people.
Transparent OLED is interesting for sure, but who is it targeted to? Who is actually going to buy that? I just don't see anyone actually BUYING one of these. I can't see who this is really for as a customer?
They need to improve and utilize advanced electrochromic glass to locally render the glass behind objects opaque, thereby enhancing clarity and contrast of the displayed objects.
It may be niche but honestly I'm all for transparent displays. Just because the majority of people won't have the imagination to put it to good use, doesn't mean it shouldn't be made and kept around.
Damn the question is what the price looking like and I just copy the G3 too man.. I guess you have to wait till 4 or 5 years for the price what is cool
Samsung transparent tv is only a prototype under development. while lg has a complete and functional ready-to-sell transparent tv, lg transparent tv has a ces 2024 award
@@СНСАЛЕКСАНДАРВУЧИЋ transparent OLED tv for home use is impractical. Samsung's transparent micro-led can be used as what it was demoed during an actual field sports game since micro-led are modular, unlike oleds.
The 1936 science fiction movie Shape of Things to Come written by H.G. Wells had a flat screen panel in the future that was transparent when off. A character was using it to show a little girl videos of how in the bygone primitive times of the 20th Century people lived in cities on the surface instead of underground cities where everything can sensibly and efficiently be climate controlled. When the movie premiered the London audience scoffed at the early scene where London in 1940 was bombed flat by fleets of enemy airplanes.
Maybe in future products like kitchen cooking recipe monitor , it's a good technology but maybe not for films or day to day tv use there will be a household in 2035 this technology will work around the home just don't realise it yet
I would imagine the transparent model is mostly targeted at Retail or other non home consumer environments as I cant see too many using it at home for strictly tv use
"Transparent screen" has absolutely no value for probably more than 99% of home buyers. Perhaps in some commercial settings, it might be a novelty. "Move along...."
No way the wireless doesn't come with compromises like compression and latency. Imagine macro blocking like a RU-vid video except its your native TV inputs
@@SuperYankeechickIt's not necessary because 99.999% of the time an HDMI cable won't be repeatedly unplugged and plugged back in unlike a USB-C cable for chargers, etc.