Is Mini LED really worse than OLED?

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 20 พ.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 745

  • @techlessYT
    @techlessYT  ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Go to brilliant.org/techless to get a 30-day free trial + the first 200 people will get 20% off their annual subscription (sponsored).

    • @KING_DRANZER
      @KING_DRANZER ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Nah Sampe D being Mini-LED was way too easily noticeable. As there is a good lift in blacks as the transition when it goes from black to milky grey when objects come onto screen is clearly noticeable. And The blooming itself is noticeable. While A and C are perfect blacks.

    • @badpuppy3
      @badpuppy3 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@KING_DRANZER Unless all the content you watch is set in Space, you'll rarely notice it in daily use. I much prefer having a brighter image that doesn't burn in, since 90% of the content on my display is near full screen brightness.

    • @KING_DRANZER
      @KING_DRANZER 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@badpuppy3 Lot many games have dark scenes with bright elements man. But yeah overall brightness is not yet TV levels. This next Gen QD-OLED should be even brighter.

    • @Deffine
      @Deffine 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      On my LG C2 42", sample B and D stands out, although sample D only looks a little washed out. You probably couldn't tell the difference if you were watching on an LCD...

    • @18matts
      @18matts 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Qdoled is not really burning in though. Look at rtings longevity test and compare the g3 vs the s95c.

  • @JohnGuyJohn
    @JohnGuyJohn 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +168

    OLED is unquestionably the right choice if you play a lot of Pong.

    • @oskargrankall4551
      @oskargrankall4551 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Nah that burn in would be crazy xD

  • @callum2277
    @callum2277 ปีที่แล้ว +300

    I 'upgraded' from an aw3423dw to a cooler master gp27q after having warranty issues with the QD-OLED. The mini led can show a bit of blooming in the dark scenes which is more noticeable if you view it of axis but the brightness and HDR impact of the mini-led in bright scenes is mind blowing. The brightness, text clarity, HDR impact and no burn in make a compelling case for mini-led especially for a mixed gamming productivity use.

    • @maxdubois6385
      @maxdubois6385 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Got the same aw3223dw, what kind of warranty issues did you experience ?

    • @callum2277
      @callum2277 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@maxdubois6385 I got 16:9 burn in from playing a couple of older games with no ultrawide support. when I claimed on the warranty dell UK had none in stock so after a couple of calls they agreed to refund me instead.

    • @JoonKimDMD
      @JoonKimDMD ปีที่แล้ว

      @@maxdubois6385 I got AW3423DWF yesterday and I love it.

    • @madac219
      @madac219 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@maxdubois6385 I'm curious to this as well , if you buy from Dell you have a fantastic warranty from what I hear its 3 years that includes burn in for no extra cost.

    • @jamyjet
      @jamyjet 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +30

      I moved to the Samsung Mini Led g8 after burn in on my QD oled Alienware in only 7 months. QD oled panels just aren't suitable for any long term productivity.

  • @keponen331
    @keponen331 ปีที่แล้ว +430

    MiniLed just needs more zones. RedMagic just announced a 5000 zone monitor for 2024, its getting there.

    • @TrinhNguyen-qc1ry
      @TrinhNguyen-qc1ry ปีที่แล้ว +81

      Mini led ips lcd with 5088 mini led zones seems like my end game monitor for me, the 4k resolution on 27 inches make everything crystal clear, the 160hz provides buttery smooth, 5088 mini led zones which create minimal blooming and very similar to oled and all that with no risk of burn in for every task you do. Until then we will have to wait for a test for that monitor.

    • @islaymmm
      @islaymmm ปีที่แล้ว +37

      For passive content consumption this is true but for gaming local dimming will add additional processing delay that's absent on an OLED so you'll have to make a pretty big sacrifice there

    • @ameserich
      @ameserich ปีที่แล้ว +50

      ​​@@islaymmmim pretty sure techless showed in the video about processing lag 9:48

    • @islaymmm
      @islaymmm ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@ameserich lol I didn't finish the video. Maybe this ktc model is an outlier or maybe it's improving to a significant degree, but generally speaking processing lag gets longer with local dimming enabled. Refer to HUB and MUB if in doubt

    • @N0N0111
      @N0N0111 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      It looks like that the next gen mini-LED wave of TVs and monitors will have 5000 zones!
      To make it complete they will come with Quantum Dots too, uhh ohh OLED you better watch out.

  • @Bundooa
    @Bundooa 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +42

    Man I wish microled was already full mainstream available at cheap prices

    • @artorias89
      @artorias89 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      in 10 years it will bro

  • @justinbavuso7706
    @justinbavuso7706 ปีที่แล้ว +74

    I will say I ended up sticking with my LG C2 over the $3000 PA32UCG MINI LED, the contrast and ability to turn off pixels looks better to the eyes than 1700 nit brightness. It took awhile to fully conclude but I have no doubts or regrets

    • @joshuabonorino9561
      @joshuabonorino9561 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I saw reviews that a Hisense mini-led q-led out performs over the lg C2

    • @DraconicA5
      @DraconicA5 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

      The black level matters more than the brightness for HDR gaming. I got a great deal on a 40-inch LG C2 for under 600 dollars, and it looks much better than most 1000-nit monitors I’ve tried.

    • @justinbavuso7706
      @justinbavuso7706 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      @@DraconicA5 ineed, it’s crazy on paper but to the eye, so much more pleasing

    • @andyalias
      @andyalias 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      I think the OLED screens are plenty bright, I have had to squint watching some HDR content on my MacBook Pro with mini led screen (1600nit peak). 800-1000 nit is enough for me. Also anti burn in tech has come so far that it’s not a problem for TVs anymore. If you get enough dimming zones mini-led could be perfect for computers.
      My MacBook Pro has 2000 dimming zones on a 14” screen. I do see blooming but only on high contrast hdr footage

    • @theyoxu2011
      @theyoxu2011 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      You are smoking something to be comparing a middle shelf TV to a pro grade photo processing monitor, two very different things

  • @Born_Stellar
    @Born_Stellar ปีที่แล้ว +23

    I bought the G9 neo over an OLED monitor because I usually have bought a monitor and used it for 6-7 years. I got a 3440x1440 back when they were still pretty new in 2015/16 and just upgraded. if I got burn in after 3 years it would kind of ruin the investment for me. besides the upgrade to mini-led was so much better than the regular IPS panel I had before. It was a good panel in 2015, but no HDR or local dimming so blacks were pretty grey.

  • @Mc3ks
    @Mc3ks 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

    When we get between 2 to 8 million dimming zones with mini-LED, OLED will be forgotten and the mini LED will be called micro-LED and youd be hard pressed to find anything better for decades.

    • @gabrieli6008
      @gabrieli6008 17 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      I don't think that would be the case, oled still has plenty of advantages over a traditional LCD regardless of how close the back light can get to per pixel dimming. You cannot achieve as high of refresh rates on an LCD compared to an OLED, due to the limitation on the pixel response time. The theoretical max refresh rate on an LCD lies around 600 Hertz, because even the fastest IPS panels that exist cannot change the pixels quick enough to make anything beyond that displayable. Since the pixel response time on an OLED type display is near instant, measuring usually around 1 10th to 1 20th The response time of an LCD, the max displayable refresh rates is in the thousands. As future-proof technology goes, OLED only suffers from degradation and burn, which are solved by micro LED display technologies. Micro LEDs are currently way too expensive, but theoretically can become cheaper to manufacture compared to OLED. The next display boom will be micro LED, the same way OLED currently is, and the same way IPS was.

  • @youdontneedmyrealname
    @youdontneedmyrealname 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Samsung just needs to stop sitting on their hands and make micro-led more affordable and mass-producible. Micro led is just better in every way possible compared to any current display tech.

  • @BigO161107
    @BigO161107 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Oled also has the advantage of ultra low grey-to-grey response times so it virtually has no motion blur, the only two downsides (which also is a doubled edged sword) is the low brightness of oled. If you want more brightness there is a lot more risk of burn in.

  • @Masterfighterx
    @Masterfighterx ปีที่แล้ว +31

    Watching this on an IPS, I liked C better, guessed A and C were OLEDs, didn't know B was VA but def was a backlit screen, D isn't bad, but something on it was kinda off to me.
    Can't wait for MicroLED

  • @definingslawek4731
    @definingslawek4731 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I actually don’t understand how we only have 576 zones in 2023, the technology to shrink these comparatively massive zones seems trivial.

  • @thetechnerd7467
    @thetechnerd7467 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    This is by far the best video I have seen on the subject. Some people think OLED is always better and anything else is so much worse. Mini LED has so much potential, just way more zones and better response times.

    • @thenonexistinghero
      @thenonexistinghero 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      OLED's just way overrated. It is the best in most areas at the moment... but only very slightly better than the best LED has to offer. And outside of extreme case scenarios, people won't notice any blooming when just watching movies or playing games. For most part, to even see a difference you'll need to be playing in a very dark room in the first place for most content. And within a few years from now that difference will be signicantly smaller again.

    • @fidelisitor8953
      @fidelisitor8953 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      @@thenonexistinghero "OLED's just way overrated. It is the best in most areas at the moment..." - How does that sentence even make sense? You just admitted that OLED is superior and yet at the same time still say it's overrated. You're just being delusional. OLED is superior and will remain superior to miniLED in both contrast and colour vibrancy.
      "And within a few years from now that difference will be significantly smaller again" - In those few years, you think OLED will remain stagnant and wait for miniLED to catchup? OLED itself is steadily improving and is getting more efficient and burn-in resistant than before with QD-OLED (and with blue phosphorescent OLEDs on the way) so it only needs to get brighter and be burn-in resistant and OLED will retain its position as the gold standard for displays while miniLED will pretty much remain as entry-level quality display.

    • @fidelisitor8953
      @fidelisitor8953 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      The only display tech that'll be able to overthrow OLED is microLED (which is unlikely due to it's FAR more complex issues) and QDEL (Electroluminescent Quantum Dot displays).

    • @acurisur
      @acurisur 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@fidelisitor8953 OLED still has significant burn in issues, which is why Alienware had to start putting 3 year burn in warranties onto their QD-OLED monitors. Mini LED has no burn in issues. The number of dimming zones will keep on going up as the tech matures, while being significantly cheaper than OLED. For productivity Mini LED is superior to OLED. For super bright content Mini LED is superior to OLED.

    • @deepblueskyK
      @deepblueskyK 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @BeggProductions Same here. I'm really satisfied with my 65 inch Mini LED. We don't have to deal with wide viewing angles when watching TV so the drawbacks of VA Mini LED panels aren't important to us.

  • @ManuSaraswat
    @ManuSaraswat ปีที่แล้ว +41

    This is seriously the most underrated channel, amazing work man, i'd love if you could make a video on the current sate of Freesync, gsync, vsync and fast sync and the best case usage for each type.

  • @Keivz
    @Keivz ปีที่แล้ว +16

    I have a 27” oled sitting right next to a 27” mini led monitor. I 100% agree with everything stated here. High APL games like Spider-Man Miles Morales? I play on my mini led. Low APL games like Resident Evil 2 Remake? I play on my oled.
    Also, very glad you highlighted at 3:39 how teeny tiny highlights (0.01% window size?) are far far less bright on mini led displays than oled. It makes a huge difference in hdr impact and cannot be emphasized enough how much of a limitation this is for mini LED monitors and TV’s.

    • @Skylancer727
      @Skylancer727 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I say the worst cases for mini-LED are star maps or just games with view of the starry sky. Mass Effect's maps looked terrible and even the sky in Terraria looks awful. I've also noticed in some cases to prevent the bloom they sometimes completely crush out stars.

    • @3choblast3r4
      @3choblast3r4 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Skylancer727 What screen do you have? I really don't have any issues with stars in dark skies or anything like that on my monitor

    • @100toeface
      @100toeface 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      what is APL?

    • @vane909090
      @vane909090 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Skylancer727 I have the Samsung Odyssey Neo G7 Mini-LED and I don't have a problem with how the stars look in space themed games like Mass Effect and Starfield. It's fine. I barely even notice any ghosting or blooming.

    • @eyad2k213
      @eyad2k213 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@100toeface
      APL stands for *Average Picture Level*.
      Essentially, APL defines how much of the displayed image is bright versus how much is dark.
      Reviewers often use different-sized white windows against a black background to measure APL. Here’s how it works:
      - A quarter-sized white box represents a 25% APL.
      - Half the screen corresponds to 50% APL.
      - A full white screen equals 100% APL.
      - Smaller windows (e.g., 1% or 5% APL) simulate small highlight areas.

  • @TechOtakuYT
    @TechOtakuYT ปีที่แล้ว +51

    I could easily tell which one is the VA and which one is the Mini LED.
    I just had to turn my phone's brightness to max, 2 in the monrning and it feels like someone threw a flashbang at me.
    Thanks techless 😁

  • @tomtomkowski7653
    @tomtomkowski7653 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I'm waiting as the mini-led technology will be more mature with at least 10000 zones on 27" and without flickering problems.
    OLED is a NoGo for me as a computer monitor. This technology is great to watch a movie or play a game from time to time but not to work on it 8+ hours per day.
    Conclusion: OLED TV - yes sure. OLED PC monitor - hell no.

  • @ziski
    @ziski ปีที่แล้ว +24

    Super informative video with good comparison and explanation. I probably won't notice the local dimming imperfections because I hate looking at monitor in dark room (most noticeable I think). Mini Led still has rooms for improvement. Hopefully next year, there will be a lot of cheaper options for mini led and oled monitors.

  • @zexedearth89
    @zexedearth89 ปีที่แล้ว +35

    A year back i got a Samsung Neo G7 which is a 32'' 4k 165hz miniled VA with 1200 dimming zones. And its highlights at certain points reach 2000 nits with HDR on.
    HDR looks amazing, i dont have to worry about burnin, its WAAAAAAAAAAY brighter overall compared to an oled panel and its a perfect size and resolution for my use case.
    Downsides are... viewing angles are not great, but they arent disgusting either. For me thats not a dealbreaker anyways. I mean i use my monitor head on so yea, got no problems with that.
    2nd thing, small bright highlights like dots on pitch black background when local dimming is on, can have a little bit of blooming but thats to be expected with miniled.
    All in all iam willing to try gen 3 oleds with the same size and resolution when they release next year but my next monitor will probably be a miniled with ~5000 dimming zones.

    • @technotalk4373
      @technotalk4373 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      i got the neo g8 and feel the same way when i got it i also got a qd-oled at the same time and tested both for a month and kept the better one i didnt like how dim oled was

  • @DelScully
    @DelScully ปีที่แล้ว +20

    I went QD-OLED with the alienware some months ago and I will keep using that until microled is in and buyable at a fair price. Oled monitors are decently priced now and I imagine mine will last atleast 5-6 years with little to no burn in as I mainly just use it for gaming and have another monitor for productivity.

    • @fidelisitor8953
      @fidelisitor8953 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      We'll probably be having QDEL displays sooner than microLEDs and they're even better.

    • @Skylancer727
      @Skylancer727 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      MicroLED is likely still 10 years out. We haven't remotely solved the problems with it and have had better luck making completely new display types instead. Full emissive QD-OLED is more likely to be close enough to microLED to most and that should come in the next 3-5 years.

    • @KingsDR
      @KingsDR 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Yea, amazon has been having some good sales on oled monitor lately. Sadly, I paid full price for my alienware for being impatient :(

    • @DelScully
      @DelScully 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Skylancer727 yeah we will see, samsung has already produced microled tv's but they are very expensive and a lot harder to make atm.. This reminds me of what OLED was like 5-6 years ago. Now you can get oled monitors that are priced within 1000 dollars and tv's as well when before the monitors were non existent and the tv's were insanely priced.

    • @DelScully
      @DelScully 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@KingsDR It just means new better versions will most likely be coming out. Looks like alienware will be releasing 4k ones and 32" sizes too.. I could see them going for the 38 or a larger size as well. I have the DWF QOLED from them and love it, 34" is the perfect size for 1440p. Anything less is too small imo, and anything more screws the pixels.

  • @kovafilms
    @kovafilms ปีที่แล้ว +10

    I love my Innocn Mini Led Monitor. For under 500$ 4k 27" it's a steal for what i use it for. Which is mostly video editing and content consumption. The dimming zones are definitley noticiable but arent that big of a deal. The image is absolutely beautiful and color accurate. My end game would be this same monitor but with more zones and higher refresh rate. That would be perfect and that future monitor will still probably cost less than 1000$ when it comes out which will be the deciding factor over OLEDs if their prices dont go down.

  • @BaBaNaNaBa
    @BaBaNaNaBa ปีที่แล้ว +28

    So basically mini LED needs more dimming zones/ better or more filters.

    • @user-yz1dl3eu8l
      @user-yz1dl3eu8l ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Not necessarily more dimming zones, it depends on the manufacturer. For TV, Sony with 576 zones is better than Samsung with 1200: th-cam.com/video/P3r34GFVYos/w-d-xo.html

    • @N0N0111
      @N0N0111 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      5000 zones mini-LED TVs and monitors are already announced this year.
      Pretty much the next gen mini-LED models will come around mid 2024.
      And they will bring the secret sauce Quantum Dots to battle OLED.
      Examples: TCL QD-MiniLED TV X955 (5,184 zones) REDMAGIC 4K 160Hz Mini-LED gaming monitor with 5088 zones.

  • @cinders8144
    @cinders8144 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Mini LED will eventually become the defacto choice for PC users wanting a good HDR experience, burn in on the OLEDs have slowly become less of a factor but it's a factor that will always exist due to the nature of the technology.

    • @Amfibios
      @Amfibios 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      burn in on OLEDs has become less of a factor FOR TVs... for monitors it'll certainly come and FAST.

  • @ThejusRao
    @ThejusRao 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    I could easily tell that sample A and sample C were OLED monitors at 720p youtube quality and 2% monitor brightness. For some people Mini-LED might suffice but after my LG C2 there's no way in hell I'm letting my next monitor be anything other than a glossy OLED. Only problem I can think of is text rendering but that is fixable to some degree, I believe.

    • @acurisur
      @acurisur 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      OLED monitors cost more and LG OLED tvs have no displayport. OLEDs also still have burn in issues, which is why Alienware has a 3 year burn in warranty because they know the issue still persists.
      Mini LED was created as an alternative to OLED, with similar dimming tech but without the burn in issues. The final version will be Micro LED but that's still some time away.

  • @TheLateral18
    @TheLateral18 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Why people make a big deal out of mini led blooming, when you can mostly see it on test. Not on gameplay

  • @quolve
    @quolve ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Im not gonna lie, there is way too much distortion in this video to even tell the differences in black, not even the oleds are coming up as black in the video
    Viewing from my own oled

    • @techlessYT
      @techlessYT  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I hope TH-cam will process this video in AV1 soon. The default VP9 codec unfortunately causes lots of artefacts.

    • @quolve
      @quolve ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Ahh that makes alot more sense as to why its so much more distorted then usual
      @@techlessYT

  • @mort996
    @mort996 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Oled is just not a suitable option for anyone in my position: 8 hour work days 5 times a week in mostly static image setting, and 4-5 hours of gaming per week. Mini led IPS is an obvious choice and I am more than happy with the GP27Q

  • @anssiaatos
    @anssiaatos 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    From my perspective, OLED technology has faced criticism for its susceptibility to burn-in, but it's important to consider the broader context of this issue. Human nature predisposes us to focus more on negative aspects and potential threats, which in this case, amplifies the perceived problem of burn-in with OLED. Moreover, it's worth noting the competitive dynamics in the display market, where LCD manufacturers have a vested interest in highlighting the drawbacks of OLED technology to maintain their market position (against LG and now Samsung).
    However, a key point often overlooked is the widespread adoption of OLED screens in smartphones. Despite the fact that most phone displays are OLED, concerns about burn-in are notably absent. This discrepancy is intriguing, especially when considering that, according to recent data, the average person spends around 3 hours and 15 minutes on their phone daily, often interacting with static UI elements - a scenario seemingly ripe for burn-in.
    This leads to an interesting observation: the issue of burn-in with OLEDs might be more of a theoretical concern than a practical one. In reality, the average consumer is likely to upgrade their TV or monitor long before any significant burn-in becomes apparent. Thus, while the concern over OLED burn-in isn't unfounded, it is perhaps exaggerated, both due to human psychological tendencies and competitive pressures in the display industry.
    Sincerely yours,
    a happy owner of LG C8 for 5 years.

    • @Jza-GZa40k
      @Jza-GZa40k 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      The issue is,Apparently samsung had an old oled and it pretty much installed this fear early on back in the day,Now,Tech has advanced and OLED is exceptional and pretty much sorted,Burn in is rare especially in newer models especially what you use it for and what room you stick it in.Apart from that,They are so much superior to any other screen and no screen can come close to its self emitted pixel count,On top of insane contrast and superior movie watching,With game modes that have the fastest input lag you simply can’t get on other TVs.

    • @michaelandrews4783
      @michaelandrews4783 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      @@Jza-GZa40k Oled still has a burn in problem

    • @OlivierK.
      @OlivierK. 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@michaelandrews4783 FUD - i've used OLED screens exclusively since 2015, for TV and multiple computer/laptop screens that i use for 8+ hours a day. Never have i encountered any form of burn-in or retention effects. The last time i saw any burn-in was on my first-gen HTC Desire (Amoled) phone in 2012, well over a decade ago.

    • @jonaslarsen3977
      @jonaslarsen3977 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I got burn in on my phone

    • @TheRealCopperFox
      @TheRealCopperFox 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Learn to talk properly, my man. 😂

  • @vedantdesai1
    @vedantdesai1 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    The only place where mini-LED looks as good as OLEDs is cinematic experience. That also happens to be the only place where OLEDs are least prone to burn in. Mini LEDs are crap in desktop work compared to OLEDs (I speak from experience) - but it is also the most burn in inducing task for OLEDs…
    Why can’t we just have the perfect tech?

    • @blahorgaslisk7763
      @blahorgaslisk7763 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      It seems Micro LED might be as close as we are going to be to a "perfect" monitor tech, but it will most probably make OLED look cheep the first few years. I still want to see what it can do. And on the cost thing I've been wrong before. Before OLED was actually released to customers there was a lot of discussion on manufacturing technology. One was described like a printer technology where the organic materials were printed on plastic film. This was speculated to make OLED manufacture a lot cheaper than TN or IPS screens. Well, that doesn't seem like it ever happened and instead OLED's are pretty expensive.

    • @xanxenon1934
      @xanxenon1934 12 วันที่ผ่านมา

      That's why I use 2 monitors. IPS and miniLED (or OLED).

  • @Xiuhtec
    @Xiuhtec 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I recognized D as Mini because of the better and brighter colors. Ironically the best of the four in the particular test shown in the intro. Mini certainly has drawbacks but I never see blooming on my 32MV2 outside productivity use (where I can just disable HDR if it bothers me and local dimming goes off with it).

  • @TechWithSean
    @TechWithSean ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Even if there were infinite dimming zones, the pixel response time will always be superior on OLED.

    • @Goesm
      @Goesm ปีที่แล้ว +6

      per pixel dimming with micro leds already is a thing on TVs (microLED) with response times of

    • @willuigi64
      @willuigi64 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Goesm Affordable consumer MicroLED is a pipe dream :( It's my pipe dream but still.

  • @FrancescoScinico
    @FrancescoScinico 28 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    The problem with mini LED is that it shifts color, particularly skin tones, in dark mode. It's essentially unusable. OLED is the future, but their really need to fix the problem with burn-in and color fringing on text. As is, it cannot be used for productivity, which is what most people need monitors for, by the way.

  • @RandomGreenFishPhone
    @RandomGreenFishPhone 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I bought an OLED 5 years ago and replaced it a few months ago because the burn in was getting very noticeable even when viewing regular content. I could see burn-in after 2 - 3 years with solid color backgrounds, but it wasn't distracting like it is now. I replaced it with an QLED TV with local dimming zones and I am quite happy with it. It doesn't have the same black levels and the colors don't pop quite as much as the OLED, but at about 1/3rd of the cost, it was a good trade-off. I will never buy an OLED again until they can guarantee their panels will not have burn in for 10 years (and have it covered by the warranty), which I doubt will ever happen. If I am spending close to $2k for a 55" TV, I don't want the picture to start degrading after just a few years.

    • @RiceCubeTech
      @RiceCubeTech 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I mean you’re basing your decision off a 5 year old panel. Newer panels get brighter and burn in far less.

    • @jeffkardosjr.3825
      @jeffkardosjr.3825 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      What are the newer panels going to look like in 5 years then?

  • @N0N0111
    @N0N0111 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    mini-LED is ramping up in zones amounts, 27" 4K 5000 zones monitors are already announced.
    384 zones mini-LED monitors are just the first gen, next gen is almost here and 2024 will be a battle vs OLED and mini-LED.

    • @1337p
      @1337p ปีที่แล้ว

      they better hurry up, i am using the 14" 10k dimming zones 1600nits HDR display from my mbp for 3 years now. I need something way bigger badly, but i am unwilling to spent a lot of money for something thats not even in the ballpark.

  • @TheDude50447
    @TheDude50447 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Atm it looks like Mini LED is sort of a transitional technology. The problem for OLED is the O part. The organic compounds degrade too fast. The question is how much they can improve that. But there are other factors to consider. The reason why OLED is a thing is because conventional LEDs cant be manufactured small enough to be used as individual pixels. The reason why I said Mini LED is sort of a transitional technology is because technically if you can make regular LEDs small enough they can be used the same way as OLEDs but technically it could be regarded as Mini LED. Currently the holy grail would be RGB coloured LEDs in Pixel size.

  • @MKR3238
    @MKR3238 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    very fair and balanced assessment of the different tech
    i love OLED but i find it annoying how some famboys act as if the tech is perfect and all of the downsides were not valid points of criticism
    regarding LCDs, they can look great with good blacks during day with lots of ambient light; but i tend to watch movies and game in dimly lit environemnts and thats always where (even good miniLED) LCDs completely fall apart for me

  • @0hMyGandhi
    @0hMyGandhi 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I had a Samsung Neo G7 and I loved and hated it in equal measure. Strongly dislike the curve, which as a monitor for productivity and graphic design, made it very difficult to really have an understanding of how my image was actually look on a flat screen.
    Blooming is a massive issue. What good is contrast if scenes with challenging white and black differences become a chore for the dimmng algorithm to make sense of?
    I made the mistake of watching The Expanse on my Neo G7 thinking that those inky blacks of space would look so great, and it was a horrible experience. Small bright spots, even with 1100+ dimming zones would blow out the surrounding darkness, making it every bit as noticable as backlight bleed or VA "smear".
    Also, because color accuracy often degrades when dimming and HDR are turned on, i would often leave these off for desktop use and it made me feel like a fool.
    The ultimate goal for a monitor in my eyes is to be absolutely a swiss army knife. If i have to baby it or finangle with the settings for every single use case, it becomes an annoyance.
    Improved zone counts will help, but mini led still relies on hdr to look good, whereas a bunch of the OLEDs I've used look great no matter what you throw at them.

  • @N0N0111
    @N0N0111 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    I so wish Sony does their thing again...
    Their Sony INZONE M9 only had 96 zones and still did insane well for what it had to work with.
    Give them 1000 to 5000 zones, I bet they can pull it off to be called* "OLED monitors" in normal day to day content!

  • @svinjadebela6893
    @svinjadebela6893 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Micro LED is "end game", but it will take years until it's affordable to mere humans.
    Newer generation of OLED TVs are cheaper than ever and less prone to burn-in. They should last for at least 5-10 years, unless use case scenario is extreme.
    Basically, as long as you don't use OLED for work 24/7, you're most likely perfectly good to go. I believe 2 or 3 OLEDs, from this point of time, should last you long enough until micro led is wide spread.
    Mini LEDs are not bad though. They are more than decent solution for anyone who needs to use TV as a monitor day in - day out. Their weakest point, imho, is subtitle blooming (for people that often use subtitles, which is about everybody except natives from USA, UK and Australia).

  • @lilpain1997
    @lilpain1997 ปีที่แล้ว +26

    im swapping to Mini LED. I love my OLED and it looks insane but I now use my desktop for other apps and not pure gaming anymore but still want that HDR experience on the games I do own with HDR support. Burn in is seriously still an issue and RTings new vid prove it, especially for QD OLED and QD OLED monitors like I have. Looking at on with 1152 zones.

    • @Yuu_Tuub
      @Yuu_Tuub 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You are welcome!!
      Check samsung odyssey neo g8. Its 4k VA with 1126 diming zones. Refresh is 240 and its a beast for gaming.
      But!!! Its extreme curved, not sure if you like curve or not, but even if you like curved monitors, this is 1000R. Well, you will get used to it and wont pay attention after a week

    • @lilpain1997
      @lilpain1997 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Yuu_Tuub I went and got the AOC 34 Mini led. So far been pretty impressed with it

    • @lilpain1997
      @lilpain1997 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@Yuu_Tuubcame back to OLED. Not sure if it's that specific panel but highlights really do not pop. Full screen and larger stuff looks insane... Seriously impressive. But highlights do not get bright at all. Guess I stick with my old trusty 16:9 for everything else.

    • @Da-iken
      @Da-iken 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You can´t beat an OLED. The Mini LED makes compromises. @@lilpain1997

    • @definingslawek4731
      @definingslawek4731 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Yuu_Tuubva is not a real option in 2023, unless like you’re a professional gamer and it provides better gaming or something l.

  • @peterbreis5407
    @peterbreis5407 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I've seen burn in on OLED. Definitely a no-no for me.

  • @jameskeen3321
    @jameskeen3321 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +37

    As someone who oddly prefers miniled I will say burn in risk is overated on current oled displays. I did have a Samsung s7 that experienced burning from watching TH-cam videos but current displays have developed ways to minimize risk of burn in. So much so that a TH-cam burn in test of the OLED Nintendo switch have set on a single screen for over a year with no real sign of burn in

    • @CJW0056
      @CJW0056 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

      It's still a dice roll tbh. People were saying burn in was "a thing of the past" when I got mine, so I expected it to last longer than just a few years. It's so freeing not having to worry about it anymore...

    • @xBINARYGODx
      @xBINARYGODx 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      minimize risk vs no risk at all - the best bet is to grab mini led and use that till micro led is actually affordable.

    • @freezak3864
      @freezak3864 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It's not even close to being overrated, it's still very much a thing.

    • @kidcoma1340
      @kidcoma1340 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      They only counter the problem by changing voltage on the pixels. Like, when there is degradation on a field of pixels, they just dimm all the pixels around it. Burn In still happens it is only hidden, and once a certain treshhold is reached where further dimming isn't possible, ALL that accumulated damage will quickly appear.

  • @djvidual8288
    @djvidual8288 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Its tricky, I would like to use OLED, because its faster for gaming. If Mini-LED becomes so good, that there is no percievable difference with blooming, it will be the new default. Hopefully Mini-LED can keep up with the Refreshrates.

  • @akaChriss4L
    @akaChriss4L 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I've been using the LG 27GS95QE for about 6 months and I am sick of the terrible sharpness, so I got my self a 4K mini led with 1100+ zones. It saved me!

  • @amariel3310
    @amariel3310 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Before the first minute I actually thought the QD-OLED was the miniLED 😂

  • @jettsom
    @jettsom 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    There's no perfect solutions right now. There's only compromises.

    • @anitaremenarova6662
      @anitaremenarova6662 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Life is about compromises. If you want the best you'll still have to pay out of your ass for it. There's no instance of getting a perfect product for cheap.

  • @jbujake
    @jbujake ปีที่แล้ว +21

    I think MicroLED technology will be far superior to both LCD and OLED display types currently available.

    • @thenonexistinghero
      @thenonexistinghero 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Definitely. Will also take about 5-10 years before actually becoming affordable sadly (as in, affordable for the high-end TV market that can drop $10-$12K on a TV).

    • @trihard42069
      @trihard42069 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      hilarious

    • @PartStupid
      @PartStupid 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@trihard42069 - He's right. You may be confusing MicroLED for MiniLED. Micro has all the benefits of OLED with none of the downsides, well other than cost but it should come down in a decade or so like OLED did.

    • @trihard42069
      @trihard42069 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@PartStupid pixel respone time, motion blur, never hitting absolute black, will still bloom what are you on about

    • @trihard42069
      @trihard42069 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      individually lit = more dead pixels
      burn in = barely relevant in modern oleds even with high usage
      Only upside is being barely brighter than qd-oled lol. Unaffordable and will be for 10 years and the pixels are huge so you need an 80 inch anyways just for good clarity. Can go on and on @@PartStupid

  • @captainsunshine1719
    @captainsunshine1719 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I was able to tell that sample D was the mini led, though I am watching on a shitty LCD phone, so take everything I say with a grain of Halite. 0:11 Panel D stuck out, as the grapes looked a lot greener than for panel C, and oleds are able to nail golden shades better. 0:14 Also the honey was a lot brighter, so that is another potential giveaway.

  • @srvuk
    @srvuk ปีที่แล้ว +3

    In the first few seconds the contest was over for me. Mini LED had vibrancy. Sample C was very poor indeed. I can see where there are areas that OLED does have an advantage but that saturation and vibrancy of the Mini LED just stood out with more of a wow factor.

    • @thenonexistinghero
      @thenonexistinghero 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      It really just depends on the kind of content. A very dark city with lights or space or something look better on an OLED. But stuff like CG movies and other content that is generally just pretty bright and vivid looks better on MiniLED. Heck, I would say for the majority of content it looks better.

    • @Jza-GZa40k
      @Jza-GZa40k 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@thenonexistingheroJust because it’s bright doesn’t mean it’s better,OLED has superior contrast and black uniformity levels which are just as important.

    • @Sean-fj9pn
      @Sean-fj9pn 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      As someone who owns high end models representing both techs I'll say 1200 zone Mini-LED looks very impressive, amazing even.. but >95% of the time the OLED looks at least slightly better or a lot better.
      It is the purists choice.

    • @Darknight0681
      @Darknight0681 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      No Mini-LED display is going to produce better color than an QD-OLED display. I have one of each side by side with me and the difference on the same content EVERYTIME cannot be understated. Mini-LED with Quantum Dot is great, don’t get me wrong. But it ain’t gonna EVER better color wise than QD-OLED. Against W-OLED it’s a little closer but even then overall the picture quality is incomparable.

  • @RabbitConfirmed
    @RabbitConfirmed 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    The fact that Apple swears on Mini LED shows that Mini LED is superior.

  • @jackryan3429
    @jackryan3429 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Mico led will make OLED obsolete, but that's still a few years to a decade away. Monitors with >2000 zones already close the gap extremely well and great for monitors due to no worry about burn-in. I do too much productivity work to have an OLED for a monitor, so the PG32UQX works well for me. I really want a mini-led ultrawide ips, but for some reason that is taking forever to come out.

    • @pjotrnygard1447
      @pjotrnygard1447 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      With the upcoming technology upgrades coming to OLED it won't become obsolete anytime soon infact OLED will be the way to go in the future

    • @jackryan3429
      @jackryan3429 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@pjotrnygard1447 organics will always suffer degradation.

  • @LCTesla
    @LCTesla 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    oled is excellent technology. nearly perfect in every aspect. the only deterrent is the overblown concern of burning in, which is practically not an issue in most usage cases. oled will not be easily dethroned.

  • @StrangelyIronic
    @StrangelyIronic 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The power of having an ultrawide from 2015 is that basically anything of decent quality these days looks better. I love my ultrawide, it's color accurate and great for my work. But I still bought one of the new faster VA panels with less "smear" (I can't really tell unless I push the worst conditions) and with mini-led local dimming zones, that again, unless I'm boosting brightness and really looking for the blooming and stuff, it's perfectly fine. To be fair, I'm not the best critic, I'm perfectly fine with the backlight bleed/blooming of this old IPS panel.
    I even find the VA panel accurate enough/good enough for editing most of the time (27 inch display, if you're at the right viewing distance, and generally the center of the screen is where the image for editng is, I don't really notice much of an issue, def not on the level of "IMPOSSIBLE TO USE, TERRIBLE" that influencers/reviewers cry). I run both displays as dual monitors, so I can just use the ultrawide for color critical work and have fun with the other panel. No risk of burn in (which would 100% happens with all the static elements that are open in my workflow) and it was pretty cheap. When microLEDs aren't 2 fortunes to buy, I'll go with that. I see OLED as being basically the same as Plasma for displays. Looks great, but way too many downsides and an obvious stepping stone to a much better solution.

  • @fractalelf7760
    @fractalelf7760 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    It is unquestionably worse, however it’s a clear improvement. It can’t ever match contrast and black levels due to how it works though.

  • @retrofizz727
    @retrofizz727 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

    Me avoiding oled because of burn in :
    Also me 1 year after I bought a VA panel and I see my whole taskbar printed on it : 👁👄👁

    • @yeyeman6569
      @yeyeman6569 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Does va have burn in?

    • @retrofizz727
      @retrofizz727 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@yeyeman6569 Yup at least mine has some noticeable burn in

    • @yeyeman6569
      @yeyeman6569 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@retrofizz727 pretty sure thats not normal i have only heard of oled burn in

    • @retrofizz727
      @retrofizz727 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@yeyeman6569 From what I’ve seen online it’s possible with VA. Such a horrible panel type ngl, I regret picking this monitor

    • @yeyeman6569
      @yeyeman6569 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@retrofizz727 I aggree honestly, i actually just returned the Samsung odyssey g5 27inch VA monitor, and sure the contrast is good and colours are pretty vibrant, still even high end VA's suffer from pixel overshooting, black smearing and in general poor color accuracy, so I switched to a nano ips monitor which has almost perfect movement.

  • @thenotred
    @thenotred ปีที่แล้ว +7

    To say the Mini LED is worse than OLED isn't really an argument (I'm not saying this video is useless, but it's very informative).
    Mini LED is meant to be a product in between regular LCD and OLED. Sort of like 'OLED quality at an LCD price' kinda marketing.

  • @Stuke51
    @Stuke51 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I’m just playing the waiting game. I’ve determined OLED isn’t ideal for my use case but we just need more 1440p Mini LED options with 240hz refresh rates.

  • @haakoflo
    @haakoflo ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Monitor A looked neutral, B had backlight and a bit oversaturated, C was undersaturated and D was also oversaturated but without easy to see backligth. From there, I was guessing each correctly, but I think if A, B and D were callibrated to have identical colors, telling A from D might be difficult.
    Looking more closely, there also seems to be some aliasing, especially for monitors A and C, indicating that they may be 1440p vs 4k for D.

    • @techlessYT
      @techlessYT  ปีที่แล้ว +4

      The difference in aliasing is probably caused by how the camera sensor pixel layout (X-Trans) interacts with the different pixel layouts. It's the newest gen triangular RGB for A, and WRGB for C and regular RGB stripe for B and D. All of them have basically the same pixel density.

  • @Truth_Exists
    @Truth_Exists ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I will answer it before watching. In perfect contidion oled will be better. But in a bright room with natural light there will be no siginicant difference, except the fact you will get a way brighter display from mini leds. Now if you are a pro oleds do have a better response times but for general use. This also depends on the refresh rate of the mini led panel as for example 540hz TN from Asus is generally better than current oleds in motion clarity.

  • @quinton1630
    @quinton1630 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I just had to take a second to say this video has incredible production quality.

  • @kizunadragon9
    @kizunadragon9 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I will never buy an OLED. I leave my computer on for hours on end and i will not risk the burn in

  • @Decki777
    @Decki777 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Micro led is the best display technology it has faster response time then OLED and no burn in issues but it's way too expensive to make it and will be always expensive.

    • @Dr.WhetFarts
      @Dr.WhetFarts 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Its just LCD tech and its slow compared to OLED. Pixel response is instantly on OLED and no backlight control. Images are refreshed faster where LCD has smearing going on. Always. Regardless of refresh rate. LCD is a dead-end tech. This is why Samsung display stopped making it. they buy 3rd party panels now. Nothing left to invent = Tech is maxed out and OLED (and eventually mLED is the future).

    • @Decki777
      @Decki777 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Dr.WhetFarts micro led is not mini led micro led's response time is like 0.2ns which is 104 times faster than OLED response time do some research 😁 . Micro LED is the future of display they don't have burn in issues,no low brightness,zero ghosting and most likely zero motion Blur.

  • @Neutrinum
    @Neutrinum 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I have the KTC 27" miniLED monitor and i am totally satisfied. Great brightness 🔅 (its really bright) and no tearing anymore. Perfect for gaming and regular use. Its half the price of an OLED monitor. OLEDs are flickering in dark areas if you game 🎮

  • @inceptionsd
    @inceptionsd หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    For ultra high-end products I think it would make more sense to make a Dual-Layer QD- LCD than a Mini-LED. Yeah, it maybe won't compete in peak-brightness segment, but it would have pixel-level dimming and OLED-like contrast, so it wouldn't need to anyway. Also it would have sustained brightness level, without ABL dimming, pixel shifting, burn-in risk and blooming. The reason MicroLED is so expensive is because they can't make the actual diodes small enough to be used on regular-sized TVs, let alone Monitors. Also they still create them individually and use pick-and-place manufacturing process, which is an extremely inefficient process compared to inkJet printing, or even vapor deposition process for OLED panels. Not to mention the diode failure rate is extremely high, too. So we definitely won't see MicroLED come to the commercial TV/Monitor market anytime soon, if ever. But a Dual-Layer LCD is a well-known tech which can rival, or even surpass OLED in the high-end market.

  • @desolation1821
    @desolation1821 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I'll be honest, showing off comparisons of monitor types on screen is kind of pointless. Because my eyes will pereive a monitor type differently than a camera, TH-cam compression fucks with the contrast (especially halos around bright objects on Monitors other than OLED), and (most importantly) the output of the Video will be drastically altered based on the Monitor type I'm running. Ultimatly the best thing you can do is to trust multiple good reviewers on their opinion and/or check in a store.

  • @gman5218
    @gman5218 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The oled black crush in the first couple seconds practically deleting some of the cherrys. Oleds are great but they def have drawbacks too

  • @aoikemono6414
    @aoikemono6414 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    The answer is YES, mini-LED is worse in so many areas than OLED. Instead of worrying about theoretical shortcomings such as burn-in (that thing CRTs also deal with), which I have never experienced in over ten years of using the tech, and is mostly used by competitors to bash the far superior competition, you should focus on the realities in front of you. Mini-LED is just a stopgap technology, made by companies like BOE who haven't been able to come close to or steal the OLED tech from LG and Samsung. (And yes, there are several high profile cases of presumably BOE buying off Samsung employees to steal their OLED tech. Who knows how much was stolen, but even still, it hasn't been enough to make them a reliable OLED panel maker. Their panels exist in cheaper Chinese phones, but Apple has rejected them multiple times as a supplier for lacking quality and not meeting specifications.) Samsung decided to go full ham in the computing space a couple years back, unfortunately right after Apple decided to use mini-LED tech in their Macbooks and iPads. OLED did exist earlier in laptops, but they were always garbage tier in comparison to the OLEDs in phones. However, it's a completely different story now after Samsung finally became serious. They are almost comparable to the latest flagship phone OLEDs now, and can reach over 500nits in SDR (even higher in HDR) and up to 240hz. The prices have also come way down, with $600 laptops getting OLED panels now. Apple is rumored to be transitioning their iPads to OLED in 2024, another blow to the shortlived mini-LED tech, which were always just a stopgap measure and trying to eke out the last remaining life out of the aging LCD tech. The Macbooks will come next. I guess it lasted longer than NFTs. It's really stupid to buy a mini-LED display right now. They have no future. There's a good Digital Trends video talking about mini-LED and it's blooming and dimming zone issues. The zones have already reached their limit. Any further advancements in increasing zone count will be cost prohibitive, and there is no way to fully isolate backlight bleeding into other zones no matter how many zones you make. Don't even bother with it. One less thing to think about. Just buy an OLED and be happy.

    • @DEFECTX9
      @DEFECTX9 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Mini Led is better for PC monitors, OLED is better for TV's

  • @gemamoch1
    @gemamoch1 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Oled's durability is very bad, it's expensive, but it's easy to have problems... Like striped screens and burn in...

  • @Zadrave
    @Zadrave ปีที่แล้ว +3

    M32P10 has 1152 dimming zones which is more than double, so I bet it's getting into imperceivable territory if larger bright objects are already hard to distinguish between mini-LED and OLED.

    • @phahq
      @phahq ปีที่แล้ว

      But the M32P10 is IPS. It'll have smaller sections of blooming, but they'll be much more jarring. Mini-LED only makes sense with IPS monitors if we're talking several thousand zones. If you want to get by with 500-1000, it'd better be a good quality VA (which is what most brands do on their TV's).

    • @Zadrave
      @Zadrave ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@phahq I bought the M32P10 and it arrived yesterday. I can tell you the only time I ever notice the blooming is when using the desktop or looking at a browser. All other content I don't see any blooming whatsoever. It's very noticeable at an angle, but IPS are made to be looked directly at anyway. So if you want a budget HDR setup, I highly recommend it!

    • @phahq
      @phahq ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Zadrave
      Yeah, I understand the point of view. In actual content, with the exception of starry skies and that sort of thing, the HDR on 1000-zone IPS is pretty good. I don't disagree. But I'm the "see it once and can't unsee it" kind of person.
      Don't get me wrong, I'd totally be down for a 2000+ zone IPS, as I still much prefer their presentation over VA (better viewing angles and more consistent transitions for all RGB levels). But, at 1000 zones, it has to be VA for me, LCD wise. Though, truthfully, a TV like the S90C is bright enough in HDR to hold me over till better LCD or microLED tech comes along.

    • @thenonexistinghero
      @thenonexistinghero 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Well, it's not just dimming zones that matter. Also the dimming algorhythm. Sony TV's have the best one and it shows since their do have a pretty low zone count.

  • @mica4977
    @mica4977 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Curious if Oled is more energy efficient thanks to it's ability to not turn on individual pixels (in addition to having lower Nit brightness capabilities)

  • @ICEMANZIDANE
    @ICEMANZIDANE ปีที่แล้ว +4

    When i listen to you and read the comments i have to say that many people dont get the whole point.
    Look at Sony‘s „cheap“ MiniLed TVs, they are significantly better than the competition who have way more dimming zones.
    You need so much experience and the actual technology to control all those dimming zones in milliseconds. Thats why even Sonys cheaper MiniLed TVs surpass the competition who simply lack the sophisticated tech to control all the lights.

  • @aaroncoleman3277
    @aaroncoleman3277 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I had the tempest gp27q. Returned 3 times due to 1st panel having a terrible backlight bleed issue and the second panel started to come loose from the housing after two weeks and the third had about 10 dead pixels on arrival.
    I thought the actual picture quality in hdr was fantastic. I’m dark rooms you’d still notice backlight bleed and haloing and blooming were pretty noticeable. After the third I got a refund and got an Alienware dwf oled.
    The difference in quality, hdr and motion is like going from 540p to 4K. There was no comparison. Oled won me over hands down

  • @marcusphoenix9603
    @marcusphoenix9603 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Could you do a comparison between the KTC M2T20 and the AOC Q27G3XMN with response time performance at 120 and 60 hertz. Both are 27 inch QHD mini LED, would like to see which is best. Thanks

  • @WillNewcomb
    @WillNewcomb 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    When I got my iphone12pm I was excited to try out it's OLED screen. To compare, I viewed the same image on my old iphone7pm beside the new phone. To all intents and purposes, they were identical.
    There may be some difference in the blacks but I could not tell.
    Moral of the story...
    Beware marketing hype!!!

  • @mrsuri33
    @mrsuri33 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    i have a mini led TV with about 1000 zones even though an oled has better black levels it is not like a 100% clean sweep thing most people when they come to my home think it is an oled i have to tell them. the price difference was what did it for me the little extra performance did not justify the extra cost

  • @Weaver_Games
    @Weaver_Games 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    My biggest problem with mini-led is just the terrible screen uniformity they tend to have. Apple's displays seem to do well with it but I've seen some truly heinous grey uniformity when looking at mini-led's before. I tend to watch anime and play cartoonish style games so they all have large blocks of solid colours - as such I really can't stand dirty screen effect on any monitor.

    • @deepblueskyK
      @deepblueskyK 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      With those LG OLED displays the grass isn't greener, too. Many OLED displays, produced in the last few years, still have big visible areas with pink tink, mostly on the left side of the display. It's not less annoying than DSE. So that's a tie...

    • @Jza-GZa40k
      @Jza-GZa40k 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@deepblueskyK That’s why you buy a Panasonic or an Sony.

    • @deepblueskyK
      @deepblueskyK 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Jza-GZa40k I returned a Pany LZ 1500 bc of severe pink tint after two weeks. Panasonic uses LG panels, too.

    • @tablettablete186
      @tablettablete186 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@deepblueskyKYeah, I have an LG OLED and gray colors have a huge darker area around the corner.
      I also have a Samsung Neo QLED (MiniLED) and it seems perfect... curious, the opposite situation of OP (panel lottery at its best lol)

  • @OC.TINYYY
    @OC.TINYYY 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Until Microled comes, miniled will always be trash even w/ 5000+ dimming zones (OLED 8.3 million dimming zones @ 4K)
    Play any game that involves space (Starfield & Star Citizen) and it'll look like ass w/ horrible blooming.
    Microled will have per pixel dimming zones just like OLED.

    • @mmstick
      @mmstick 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

      It's not about how many dimming zones you have, but how well your software utilizes them. I just got a TCL 75C809 with only 640 dimmable zones and 1300 HDR nits, and it doesn't have any perceivable bloom or bleed. I've played some HDR10 videos of fireworks with subtitles, as well as No Man's Sky on the PS5, and there wasn't any blooming at all. The TV uses features it calls "local contrast" and "micro contrast" to eliminate blooming and improve contrast. So if you see a TV suffering from bloom, then it's a software issue in how they're implementing the technology.

  • @diltontan4438
    @diltontan4438 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I tried Mini LED and maybe it was a crappy version (it's supposed to be HDR1000) but the HDR just wasn't even close when compared to OLED. The picture was very washed out and highlights just weren't being highlighted.

    • @thenonexistinghero
      @thenonexistinghero 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      HDR1000 means that the nits capability falls somewhere between 600 and 1000 or so. Probably around 800-900. Any great high-end LED these days reaches 1500+ nits easily. And brightness aside, image quality of these TV's that don't get up to that level is also significantly worse.
      For me, I don't even have a miniLED. I still have a regular good old LED using FALD. Sony's Z9F. And while my brother's and mother's recent OLEDs definitely have better black levels... the actual image quality is very close and HDR on my TV looks just as impressive for most part. Some things their TV's excel at. Some other things mine excels at. The jump from mid-end to high-end TV is still pretty damn big.

  • @JsGarage
    @JsGarage 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Pros and cons to every monitor just gotta pick the one that aligns with what you’re willing to live with.

  • @DRayL_
    @DRayL_ 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I won't be getting either Mini LED or OLED. But currently, I've been struggling with trying to decide between several brands of monitors and have yet to figure out which to get. The specs I'm looking for are:
    32"
    UHD [4K]
    IPS
    144hz ^
    I've looked at LG, ASUS, DELL, and Samsung...and have no idea which way to go. I currently have an LG 32" 4K IPS monitor, but it is the 60hz model. Been thinking that upping the hz would be good, but when these monitors are so expensive, I've had a hard time deciding what to do.
    What would you your advice?

    • @DRayL_
      @DRayL_ 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Anyone?
      @techlessYT

    • @0hMyGandhi
      @0hMyGandhi 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You didn't mention your use case

    • @DRayL_
      @DRayL_ 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@0hMyGandhi Gaming, mostly. 4K Youtue [as it does make a different between 4K and 1440]. I play games like Ghostwire Tokyo, Fortnite, Genshin Impact, Modded Skyrim,...things like that.
      Thanks, if you can offer advice on which brand/model.

    • @Zicrixdoesart
      @Zicrixdoesart 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Gigabyte m32u, or MSI MPG321UR-qd if you can spring it, quantum dots really do help with colors, 85% coverage of rec.2020!

    • @DRayL_
      @DRayL_ 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Zicrixdoesart I appreciate the input. 🙂

  • @Last_ZhuaGenbao
    @Last_ZhuaGenbao ปีที่แล้ว +2

    With miniled's virtually unrivalled picture quality (better performance in many scenes), very long lifespan, and, crucially, extra-large size and lower price, I think the market will belong to miniled for some time (until microled prices become accessible to the general public).

    • @definingslawek4731
      @definingslawek4731 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Unrivalled compared to what? Non mini led IPS and va and tn panels or?

    • @fidelisitor8953
      @fidelisitor8953 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Yeah, unrivalled compared to standard LED. OLED is still king in display quality. It's superior contrast and much more vibrant colours beat the bright but washed out miniLED any day.

  • @nathanacreman632
    @nathanacreman632 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I mean personally I could easily tell which screens were which. The miniled is wayyyy better than LED/LCD, but it's still not an OLED. I would say if you have money to burn, the OLED is better especially since people with that sort of money are almost certainly going to replace the panel before burn in becomes a concern.

  • @DigIntoGaming
    @DigIntoGaming 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Personally I prefer the brightness of mini led over the absolute blacks of oled. I actually like to see when I'm playing and not be in complete darkness. Most games I feel the need to up the gamma on anyways. Also oled is like double the price of mini led. The mini led's colors are pretty close in vibrancy to oled to my eyes. Especially when comparing to non mini led and non oled monitors. I also like to have my monitors/tv's last more than 3-5 years. I used to have a plasma TV and burn in was a really bad issue. I know burn in on oled can be reduced or fixed but it basically is reducing the blues overtime. Also the organic nature of oled means it won't last as long. TV and monitor technology is getting so advanced we won't really need anything new for a very long time. Once you get 4k 144hz with vrr your pretty much set for life. The only other thing I'd like is the variable resolution tech that allows you to have native 4k and 1080p on the same display. But I doubt that will come to tv's and I use large displays. Micro led will be superior to anything we have now but it won't be affordable for over a decade. Rumors suggest that 2024 will have better mini led and oled tech but we will have to see. Unless gpus get cheaper and still get better at 4k gaming, I might just have to go back to 1080p 😭

  • @REgamesplayer
    @REgamesplayer 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Monitor and TV tech are still decades away before being actually good and affordable. Have LG C2, was forced to use vivid setting to get any color and brightness out of it. Just got Neo G7 monitor. An awful monitor. It is dim AF and has inaccurate color recreation. It doesn't help that I must turn brightness to 100% and saturation to right around there too, because otherwise, monitor is just a dim, grey mess.
    I do not know what you are recommending everyone, but those monitors still look awful. Somehow, youtube footage looks 10x better than the actual monitor you are getting. Well, at least I got 4k decent mini-LED panel for a fair price. Monitors are slowly getting there, but I do believe that this struggle will be my entire life.
    And I thought that when I finished school, most of technical progress was already done and we will stop having hardware obsolescence. I see Samsung Odyssey Neo G7 just like my 1080 TA panel which I bought in late 2013. It was a transitionary period back when, it is still transitionary period now. Hopefully, something meaningfully better comes in several years. I'm tired of 300+ nits sustained full window brightness. News flash, it isn't enough for monitor to look good in light mode. You need double that.

  • @IMartz_0
    @IMartz_0 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Hi! Excellent video as always. How could I contact you to ask you some questions regarding to DisplayCAL? Thank you 😁

  • @Niels_f2704
    @Niels_f2704 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The only benefits with Miniled is overall brightness and not have the risk of it burning it. My pick would still be OLED for now, but would rather hold on until we have Microled wich is basically the best of both worlds since every pixel lights up individually (Just like OLED), but eliminates the risk to burn in and is overall brighter.

  • @fahimahsan3603
    @fahimahsan3603 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Personally I'm actually quite scared of OLED tech.
    My OLED panel just died automatically last month and there's no help from Warranty service.
    I think Samsung is really doing a stupid job with their OLED manufacturing.
    They've made their display extremely thin and brittle ,also didn't cared about burn in issues seriously. I don't think we need a monitor to look like Paper ,if it dies automatically.

    • @XeqtrM1
      @XeqtrM1 ปีที่แล้ว

      That the tv automaticly dies can happen to any tv no matter the panel type

    • @XeqtrM1
      @XeqtrM1 ปีที่แล้ว

      Sadly getting a good panel is RNG after all

    • @keerthan7558
      @keerthan7558 ปีที่แล้ว

      isn't that the very nature of oleds , they are as thin as a paper because they don't need backlight and the burn in issue is common but can extend the life through some software tweaks ( asus does it with all their oled equipped tech)

    • @XeqtrM1
      @XeqtrM1 ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@keerthan7558yep

    • @XeqtrM1
      @XeqtrM1 ปีที่แล้ว

      ​OLED isent any weaker any tv can break if you don't know how to take care of your product but you r right

  • @MsSjaakvaak
    @MsSjaakvaak 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I'd choose mini led over OLED because it doesn't (always) have PWM, and therefor has less eye strain

  • @Duztey
    @Duztey 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I got the LG 27GR95QE oled a week ago.
    Before I have been gaming on the LG 27GP850 IPS and an LG C2 65" oled. The new display are both of these combined.
    There is no denying this is the "end-game" monitor for me. A lot of games have a whole new feeling when playing them, also I do play mostly in a dark room so no backlight-bleed/blooming is something I'm glad the oled is without.

    • @Simon_Denmark
      @Simon_Denmark 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I got the 27GR95QE recently as well. I’ve been pretty happy with it and it’s my first OLED and actually HDR capable monitor. I did notice a dead pixel after a short use though and I’ll be sending it for warranty after the holidays. Another problem that I never had with my IPS is VRR flicker which can be quite annoying sometimes. I would also much prefer glossy coating on the panel and the matte screen coating has a ”grainy” look to it with certain colors.

    • @Jza-GZa40k
      @Jza-GZa40k 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Simon_Denmark Could be the nature of a dodgy computer monitor,TVs don’t have this issue so it’s still in its infancy for sure

    • @Simon_Denmark
      @Simon_Denmark 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Jza-GZa40k If you meant the VRR gamma flicker, it’s a common issue on OLED monitors AND TV’s. It doesn’t only affect monitors. I think that some VA panels have it too. LG has even addressed it themself. LG has even added a warning in the settings that flickering may occur in certain conditions.

  • @skankhunt420
    @skankhunt420 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    They're all getting there. We aren't far from almost perfect displays

  • @danb5119
    @danb5119 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Mini LED > OLED :) I am happy spending half the money for a almost same quality display and as stated by this video better quality in bright rooms/areas. Me happy, save money :)

  • @curties
    @curties 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    still waiting for those microLED displays.

  • @rcdude86
    @rcdude86 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Ive been waiting for mini led for a while. It is very close. I purchased the hisense 100u8k and its pretty amazing for a 100” tv. Thought not a monitor the 144hz refresh and using it as a monitor in the man cave room with pc in use is really fun. It doesn’t have any blooming. Im very impressed with the local dimmer zones of it and the color accuracy after testing with a i1 pro spectrometer. Its been a fun toy to have.

  • @davidbuddy
    @davidbuddy 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Just at the 0:43 mark for Sample D, watching on a VA panel I immediately saw the camera capturing the halo around the fruit on the left. Since the rest of the blacks looked good and A and C didn't have this effect it was pretty obvious that D was the Mini LED from this alone.
    You also need to factor in other aspects that make OLEDs better than LCDs such as superior response times for the OLED which cannot be fixed by introducing dimming zones on the back light. An LCD will always be an LCD.

    • @HaasTheFirst
      @HaasTheFirst 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      This. It's oleds are better because it's the much simpler tech, yet delivers better results. No algo for backlight necessary, it's just binary for every pixel. My theory is still that if anything, oleds will get a "brightness boost backlight", but in the end everything will be an oled.

  • @6Twisted
    @6Twisted 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Is a mini led with 1000 zones worth 50% more than a regular IPS for 30% desktop use, 30% gaming and 40% videos? That's my current dilemma. Also does the dimming work with everything? I don't play AAA games.

  • @64-96
    @64-96 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I don't think people realise the disparity between top-end MiniLED panels and the cheaper ones- the best cheaper MiniLED so far is Acer Nitro XV275K P3, and the best balls to the walls MiniLED monitor right now is still the Odyssey Neo G7. Twice the local dimming zones, twice the brightness and better quality VA panels with much higher native contrast ratio, plus Samsung has a really good local dimming algo that generally doesn't have competition other than from TCL's newer high end MiniLED products in the TV space.
    So it's not just a question about OLED, WOLED, QD-OLED or MiniLED, you also have to keep in mind that any of these can still be quite mediocre products.

  • @dkbaghel123
    @dkbaghel123 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    PWM flicker is not good for eyes and migraine in OLEDs

  • @nivity
    @nivity ปีที่แล้ว +2

    When/if mini led amount grows for computer monitors I’ll take it over oled any day.

  • @mfam72
    @mfam72 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Is there any miniLED monitor with glossy finish?

  • @bitdevice
    @bitdevice 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Even today technology is still trying to catch up with some qualities of CRT monitors like zero lag and perfect motion clarity. However I appreciate not having to mess with screen geometry.