Every year at CES,eroticism definiton TV makers try to outdo each other by cramming even more pixels into TVs that are just a little bigger and thinner than in years past.
That's true of this year's TV lineup too (see the rise of 8K), but LG's latest OLED TV has something entirely different going for it: it's completely flexible, and can roll away into its base when not in use.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
LG showed off a prototype of the concept at last year's CES, but the finished product, officially called the LG Signature OLED TV R, is even more impressive: It's a 65-inch 4K OLED TV, with HDR and the same smart TV capabilities as LG's other sets. It's thin, but doesn't look particularly bendy at first glance. Hit a button on the remote and the whole thing easily slides back into its base, which has a 100-watt Dolby Atmos sound bar built in.
Inside the base, the OLED display is rolling up around a central spindle, much the way you'd roll up a projector screen.
"It uses a flexible substrate rather than a rigid piece of glass that the OLED material is deposited on," explains LG's director of product marketing, Tim Alessi. He says the TV is rated to last at least 50,000 cycles of being rolled up and then out again, so prospective buyers shouldn't have to worry too much about the display degrading over time.
The rollable design enables a few other tricks as well. If you're listening to music, for example, you can retract the TV completely to take full advantage of its attached sound bar. LG is also introducing something it's calling "line view," which keeps all but the top quarter of the TV rolled up.
While in line view you can use the display as a clock or digital picture frame, or listen to music. There's also a "mood" setting, with a handful of visualizations, like falling snowflakes or a crackling fireplace.
LG hasn't revealed an exact price or release date for its rollable set just yet, but the TV is expected to go on sale in the second half of this year.
Topics Gadgets
Huawei releases smart driving app HIMA · TechNodeByteDance set to buy back shares from investors at $268 billion valuation: report · TechNodeLi Auto delays launch of first battery EV til March · TechNodeKuaishou to increase focus on property business in recent overhaul: report · TechNodeShanghai raises free license plate threshold for new energy vehicles · TechNodeChina’s selfTSMC to mass produce 2nm chips for Apple in 2025: report · TechNodeSubsidiary of New Oriental saw stock price slide nearly 20% after livestream dispute · TechNodeSubsidiary of New Oriental saw stock price slide nearly 20% after livestream dispute · TechNodeVolkswagenHuawei sets up smart car subsidiary, selling shares to Changan and more · TechNodeAlibaba appoints six young leaders to oversee key operations at Taobao and Tmall · TechNodeXiaomi launches Weibo legal account amid unverified reports on upcoming car SU7 · TechNodeThai company reportedly claims $2.86 billion in compensation from Luckin Coffee · TechNodeHuawei forecasts 98 billion dollars in revenue for 2023 · TechNodeEHang delivers its first unpiloted passengerNIO gets $2.2 billion cash injection from Abu Dhabi government fund · TechNodeTikTok likely to revive eTikTok likely to revive eChinese video site Bilibili declares “Ah?” its word of the year 2023 · TechNode Barneys Fantasia by Adrienne Raphel Crush by Kathryn Davis The One Who Happened by Xi Chuan Diary, 2010 by Adam Levin Claire Schwartz, Poetry by Claire Schwartz What Our Spring Issue Writers Are Looking At by The Paris Review Redux: Even a Fact Is Not a Fact by The Paris Review Two Poems by Kathleen Ossip Tricks, Tension, Surface, Suspense by Andrew Norman Wilson Ye’s Two Words by The Paris Review David Wojnarowicz’s Home in the City by Hannah Gold You Can’t Put Your Arms Around a Memory by The Paris Review Jamaica Kincaid’s Rope of Live Wires by Maya Binyam A Formal Feeling: A Conversation with Claudia Durastanti by Mia Colleran How to Choose Your Perfume: A Conversation with Sianne Ngai and Anna Kornbluh by Jude Stewart Venice Dispatch: from the Biennale by Olivia Kan Watch the Staples Jr. Singers Perform Live at The Paris Review Offices by The Paris Review Redux: You Don’t Know You’ve Remembered by The Paris Review Announcing Our Spring Issue by Emily Stokes Redux: Another Drink by The Paris Review
2.3093s , 10196.1015625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【eroticism definiton】,Feast Information Network