Samsung expands its Micro RGB LED TV lineup for 2026, adding 55–100″ models alongside the 115″ flagship as competition in RGB-based TVs heats up. Building on the 115-inch Micro RGB TV introduced ...
LG is set to unveil its first-ever flagship RGB television at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2026. Called the LG Micro RGB evo, the new TV will use individual red, green and blue LEDs as its ...
This LG announcement could be the signal that 2026 will be the year of mini and micro RGB LED TVs. This LG announcement could be the signal that 2026 will be the year of mini and micro RGB LED TVs. is ...
Samsung will launch new 55- and 100-inch Micro RGB TVs in 2026, among others. The TVs use a new LED technology to output highly accurate and vibrant images. To further enhance output, the panels house ...
CES 2026 is about to erupt into one of the most brutal TV showdowns the industry has seen in years—because Sony is back, and it’s coming out swinging. After spending far too long on the sidelines, ...
TCL has announced its latest Q9M series RGB-Mini LED TVs at the 2025 TCL Mini LED Autumn Launch Event in China. The series includes 65-inch, 75-inch, 85-inch, and 98-inch models. Each model features ...
Samsung Electronics now launches its new Micro RGB technology, claiming to be the world’s first, a display innovation integrating micrometer-sized RGB LEDs with advanced precision control to elevate ...
Forward-looking: Sony has unveiled a new display technology called General RGB LED Backlight Technology, which is expected to improve how colors are presented on screens. This approach replaces ...
The backlight tech is just a concept for now, but it could lead to more detailed displays without the drawbacks of OLED. The backlight tech is just a concept for now, but it could lead to more ...
Vcc Labs’ Nova is a tiny, open-source hardware Raspberry Pi RP2040 development board with a USB-C port, a 70 (7×10) addressable RGB LED matrix, and two 12-pin GPIO headers for expansion. It can be ...
The Neewer CB200C COB RGB LED’s 23000 Lux output will be too powerful to be used at full strength for most shoots, but if you need the firepower and are studio-based then its well worth considering.
Recently, I was working on a project that needed a couple of LEDs on its front panel for status indication. I realize many, if not most, pieces of electronic equipment now use graphic LCDs, Bluetooth ...