Gear News of the Week: LG Debuts an RGB LED TV, and Google Brings Find Hub to Wear OS
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Gear News of the Week: LG Debuts an RGB LED TV, and Google Brings Find Hub to Wear OS
"The new MRGB95B TV will use an upgraded processor and a brighter panel, and it will achieve 100 percent coverage of BT.2020, DCI-P3, and Adobe RGB color gamuts. Translation: insanely accurate color. The most exciting part of this new model is that it will come in more "everyday" screen sizes than one might expect, ranging from a massive 100 inches to a more normal modern size of 75 inches, meaning consumers might actually buy this for their posh new living room."
"RGB LEDs allow for brighter displays with more accurate color, not to be confused with micro LED displays, where each pixel is its own self-emmisive LED. RGB LED uses clusters of red, green, and blue that illuminate multiple pixels at once. It's the next step in color accuracy in TV displays, following the quantum dot displays that have been popular for several years. - Parker Hall"
"Samsung is also getting in on the new technology, with Micro RGB TVs that will range in sizes from 55 to 115 inches in 2026. The new models represent the smallest RGB LED screen sizes we have seen from any brand so far (though we expect competition from more affordable RGB players like Hisense and TCL to come). Just like LG, Samsung is announcing a next-generation, heavily AI-optimized chipset for its new TV,"
LG will release the MRGB95B RGB LED TV in 2026 with an upgraded processor, a brighter panel, and 100 percent coverage of BT.2020, DCI-P3, and Adobe RGB color gamuts. The MRGB95B will come in larger consumer-friendly sizes ranging from 75 to 100 inches. RGB LED backlighting uses clusters of red, green, and blue LEDs to illuminate multiple pixels at once, enabling higher brightness and more accurate color than quantum dot displays while differing from pixel-level microLED. Samsung will ship Micro RGB TVs from 55 to 115 inches in 2026 with an AI-optimized chipset and similar 100 percent BT.2020 claims.
Read at WIRED
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