![]() ![]() There will still be some intrepid reporters, risking 'rona for the chance to stroke a new laptop demonstration model. We're still going to be suffering through the faint hope of a touch of normalcy and in-person meetings, hands-on briefings, and presentations, only to be dashed late in the day by another variant and more locked down airports. (Image credit: Consumer Technology Association)ĬES 2022 lowlight: Now, it's not like I'm desperate to go back to Vegas ever again, or even that I particularly value CES as a PC gaming event, but my biggest low from the show this year is the depressing realisation that this is what 2022's big events are going to be like for at least the next 12 months. So there will be at least two amazing QD-OLED gaming monitors appearing this year. This first Odyssey display also sports a 175Hz refresh rate and 0.1ms response time, and is also going to find its way into an Alienware monitor, the AW3223DW, by virtue of a partnership between the two companies. Slap that over the top of an OLED panel, with its own natural blacks, and potential for colours to fade over time, and you get a heady mix which will make for awesome gaming screens. The QD filter enhances the colours and helps contrast. There will be at least two amazing QD-OLED gaming monitors appearing this year. It made Samsung's QLED panels /almost/ as effective as OLED, and made them cheaper to produce. ![]() The Samsung Odyssey G8QNB (likely to get some sort of Odyssey Quantum G8 moniker in the future) is a 34-inch ultrawide display using the company's first Quantum Dot OLED screen, mixing the best of both panel worlds.īack in the day, when Samsung pulled out of the OLED TV race with Korean rival, LG, it then went on to create the Quantum Dot filter to enhance the colour gamut of traditional displays. ![]()
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