Bigger, more beautiful and better connected: At the Consumer Electronics Show, which kicked off Tuesday in Las Vegas, TV makers flaunted top-notch models meant to lure a generation weaned on the internet.
LG, Samsung, Sony and others touted the visual grandeur of new 8K super-high-definition screens, which are suited for TVs larger than 65 inches in diameter, a fast growing segment of the market.
The luxury sets are meant to appeal to millennials and Generation Z with features such as video streaming services, plus smart home and video games capabilities.
Such events include Japan public broadcaster NHK’s plans to show the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo in 8K, which is expected to help boost that demand
Samsung’s Sero TV, for example, pivots from landscape to portrait modes, the same way a smartphone or tablet lets a viewer flip a screen while watching a YouTube video, eliminating the black bands on the side.
“Screens have become lifestyle products,” said JH Han, president of Samsung’s visual display business. “It has never been so clear that the role of the screen is changing right before our very eyes.”
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The newer sets go beyond the current 4K or ultra-high definition displays — already an upgrade from the first generation of flat panels — to 8K, with more pixels for the massive screens now becoming popular.
The Frame transfroms a movie at home into amazing artwork! #Samsung #CES2020 @SamsungTV pic.twitter.com/1QMqDFlRqi
— John Flickinger (@theFLICKpick) January 8, 2020
8K tipping point?
Rich 8K definition is meant to woo owners of huge flat screens, by packing more color to fill larger viewing areas. Networks and content creators alike are beginning to come together to cater to viewers with such screens.
Samsung, for example, is working with YouTube and other partners to stream 8K content directly to its most expensive TVs, according to Joe Stinziano, Samsung Electronics America executive vice president.
The luxury sets are meant to appeal to millennials and Generation Z with features such as video streaming services, plus smart home and video games capabilities
He predicted 2020 would be a “tipping point” for 8K going mainstream. Skyworth, a well-established TV maker in China, unveiled premium television models meant to break into the US and European markets.
“Only when the whole industry works together can it realize the full value of 8K to users,” said Skyworth TV chief executive Tony Wang. “The entire 8K industry chain is reaching its full development and now is the best time to launch an 8K screen, when users can fully benefit from it.”
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Skyworth’s new 75-inch Q91 with 8K graphics will be priced at $5,999 in the United States.
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— Samsung TV (@SamsungTV) January 6, 2020
Playing the game
To stay in the race, televisions are also adapting to connected lifestyles by integrating voice assistants from Amazon, Google or Apple, and offering functionalities adapted to streaming platforms and video gaming.
The latest models presented at CES included advanced technical characteristics in terms of graphics and sound capabilities to satisfy gamers eager for greater immersion. “A unique growth engine for our business has been gaming monitors,” Stinziano of Samsung said.
Samsung, for example, is working with YouTube and other partners to stream 8K content directly to its most expensive TVs
Millennials see a television as a tool to help them win video games, according to TCL executives who showed off an enhanced line-up boasting features aimed at players.
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— Samsung TV (@SamsungTV) January 8, 2020
That said, demand for flat panel displays fell short of expectations last year in the consumer market due in part to trade tensions between China and the United States as well as a slowing global economy, according to IHS Markit.
But it forecast “robust growth” of flat panel displays this year.
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“Although there are still uncertainties due to the trade war between the US and China, demand for flat-panel displays is expected to increase on the back of historically low panel prices and the impacts of various sports events held during even-numbered years,” said IHS Markit Technology display research director Ricky Park.
Such events include Japan public broadcaster NHK’s plans to show the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo in 8K, which is expected to help boost that demand.
AFP with additional input by GVS News Desk.